Browse content similar to 02/02/2018. Check below for episodes and series from the same categories and more!
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Hello, this is Breakfast,
with Charlie Stayt and Naga | 0:00:07 | 0:00:09 | |
Munchetty. | 0:00:09 | 0:00:12 | |
The number of men dying
from prostate cancer overtakes | 0:00:12 | 0:00:15 | |
the number of women killed by breast
cancer for the first time. | 0:00:15 | 0:00:19 | |
It's now the third biggest
cancer killer in the UK. | 0:00:19 | 0:00:21 | |
Charities are calling for more
screening and research | 0:00:21 | 0:00:24 | |
into the disease. | 0:00:24 | 0:00:27 | |
Good morning. | 0:00:37 | 0:00:38 | |
It's Friday, the 2nd of February. | 0:00:38 | 0:00:40 | |
Also this morning: | 0:00:40 | 0:00:42 | |
The Prime Minister says her trip
to China is a sign of a "global | 0:00:42 | 0:00:46 | |
Britain" and insists
that she is delivering what people | 0:00:46 | 0:00:49 | |
want on Brexit. | 0:00:49 | 0:00:52 | |
I'm not a quitter. I mean this
because there is a job to be done | 0:00:52 | 0:00:58 | |
here and that's delivering for the
British people. | 0:00:58 | 0:01:02 | |
An investigation into the mystery
death of Natalie Wood more than 30 | 0:01:02 | 0:01:06 | |
years ago says her husband is being
treated as a person of interest. | 0:01:06 | 0:01:15 | |
Apple has recorded £14 million of
profit for the last three months, | 0:01:15 | 0:01:19 | |
but as sales of iPhones fell shortly
despite the launch of a new handset, | 0:01:19 | 0:01:24 | |
I will have the details. -- £14
billion, | 0:01:24 | 0:01:30 | |
I will have the details. -- £14
billion,. | 0:01:30 | 0:01:30 | |
In sport, there's a rethink over
funding for some Olympic | 0:01:30 | 0:01:33 | |
there's a rethink over
funding for some Olympic | 0:01:33 | 0:01:35 | |
and Paralympic sports as UK Sport
has a change of heart. | 0:01:35 | 0:01:38 | |
Traditional sports badminton
and archery get £600,000, | 0:01:38 | 0:01:40 | |
ahead of the Tokyo Games in 2020,
while new sports including climbing | 0:01:40 | 0:01:43 | |
will receive a share
of over a million too. | 0:01:43 | 0:01:45 | |
We'll find out how a bear's eye view
can tell us about what the future | 0:01:45 | 0:01:50 | |
holds for polar bears on ice. | 0:01:50 | 0:01:51 | |
High pressure across as today, so
things are largely dry and settled. | 0:01:51 | 0:01:55 | |
But there will be a keen wind and a
few showers in the west. But the | 0:01:55 | 0:01:59 | |
cool theme continues into next week.
More in 15 minutes. Thank you. | 0:01:59 | 0:02:04 | |
First, our main story. | 0:02:04 | 0:02:05 | |
The number of men dying in the UK
from prostate cancer has overtaken | 0:02:05 | 0:02:09 | |
the number of women killed by breast
cancer for the first time. | 0:02:09 | 0:02:12 | |
The charity Prostate Cancer UK says
advances in diagnosis | 0:02:12 | 0:02:15 | |
and treatment of breast
cancer have paid off | 0:02:15 | 0:02:17 | |
and similar benefits could be seen
if more money was allocated | 0:02:17 | 0:02:20 | |
to the fight against
prostate cancer. | 0:02:20 | 0:02:21 | |
Here's our health
correspondent Dominic Hughes. | 0:02:21 | 0:02:26 | |
Prostate cancer does
not discriminate. | 0:02:26 | 0:02:30 | |
Last year, keen runner Tony Callier
discovered he had the disease | 0:02:30 | 0:02:33 | |
while training
for an ultramarathon. | 0:02:33 | 0:02:35 | |
His diagnosis was late,
and he knows cancer will eventually | 0:02:35 | 0:02:39 | |
take his life, so Tony
is using the time he has left | 0:02:39 | 0:02:43 | |
to warn other men about the dangers. | 0:02:43 | 0:02:45 | |
I think it's really important
that people are aware | 0:02:45 | 0:02:50 | |
of what the symptoms
are and I would actually urge men | 0:02:50 | 0:02:53 | |
to talk to their doctors, | 0:02:53 | 0:02:55 | |
if they have any
urinary issues at all. | 0:02:55 | 0:02:58 | |
My issue is that I didn't
actually have any symptoms | 0:02:58 | 0:03:02 | |
and they think I had the cancer
for ten years beforehand. | 0:03:02 | 0:03:05 | |
More men are living to an age
where they have a greater chance | 0:03:05 | 0:03:09 | |
of developing prostate cancer. | 0:03:09 | 0:03:10 | |
So, in 2015, more than 11,800 men
died of the disease, | 0:03:10 | 0:03:13 | |
compared with just over 11,400
deaths in 2015 due to breast cancer. | 0:03:13 | 0:03:18 | |
And while the proportion
of people dying from | 0:03:18 | 0:03:20 | |
prostate cancer, the mortality rate,
has fallen in the past decade, | 0:03:20 | 0:03:26 | |
down by 6%, the decline in deaths
from breast cancer has been | 0:03:26 | 0:03:32 | |
even greater, at more than 10%. | 0:03:32 | 0:03:35 | |
It is time to get behind this
and to realise that we need to get | 0:03:35 | 0:03:39 | |
on top of it now because it
will just become more common, | 0:03:39 | 0:03:42 | |
and it is actually going to kill
more men, if we are not able | 0:03:42 | 0:03:46 | |
to do that. | 0:03:46 | 0:03:47 | |
Tony has joined those calling for
increased funding for research | 0:03:47 | 0:03:50 | |
and the development of a reliable
prostate screening programme, | 0:03:50 | 0:03:52 | |
so the gains seen in the fight
against breast cancer can be matched | 0:03:52 | 0:03:56 | |
in the fight against
the disease that he knows | 0:03:56 | 0:03:58 | |
will eventually claim his life, too. | 0:03:58 | 0:04:05 | |
In the next half an hour,
we'll speak to a GP about the signs | 0:04:05 | 0:04:08 | |
and symptoms of prostate
cancer to look out for. | 0:04:08 | 0:04:11 | |
That's at 6:40am. | 0:04:11 | 0:04:13 | |
Health leaders have written
to the Justice Secretary, | 0:04:13 | 0:04:15 | |
urging him to reform the pay-out
system for negligence claims | 0:04:15 | 0:04:18 | |
against the NHS. | 0:04:18 | 0:04:21 | |
They say the NHS would have to pay
up to £65 billion before current | 0:04:21 | 0:04:27 | |
claims were successful. The
government is looking at measures to | 0:04:27 | 0:04:30 | |
control costs in such cases. | 0:04:30 | 0:04:32 | |
Theresa May insists she's delivering
what British people want on Brexit, | 0:04:32 | 0:04:35 | |
and setting out a clear vision
to the rest of the world. | 0:04:35 | 0:04:38 | |
Downing Street says billions
of pounds' worth of deals have been | 0:04:38 | 0:04:41 | |
signed during her three-day visit
to China, which ends later. | 0:04:41 | 0:04:44 | |
Earlier, the Prime Minister
spoke to the BBC. | 0:04:44 | 0:04:47 | |
It is important that we deliver what
people want, which is control of our | 0:04:47 | 0:04:52 | |
money, orders and laws, which is
what we are doing. What are showing | 0:04:52 | 0:04:56 | |
in China is how we can ensure that
we actually enhance our trade with | 0:04:56 | 0:05:01 | |
the rest of the world as well. Why
do we want to do that? It was as | 0:05:01 | 0:05:05 | |
good for people in Britain and good
for jobs in Britain. | 0:05:05 | 0:05:09 | |
Our correspondent Robin Brant
joins us from Shanghai. | 0:05:09 | 0:05:12 | |
She is trying to be convincing that
she is on top of the message he is | 0:05:12 | 0:05:16 | |
trying to deliver. The trip is
nearly finished. It is combative | 0:05:16 | 0:05:20 | |
stuff in that interview and she and
this trip to China as she began, | 0:05:20 | 0:05:24 | |
saying, I am not a quitter, and
making clear that she wants to carry | 0:05:24 | 0:05:29 | |
on until the next general election.
On Brexit it is just the beginning | 0:05:29 | 0:05:35 | |
of the negotiation process with the
EU and she says she has laid out her | 0:05:35 | 0:05:39 | |
vision and she convinced that she is
doing her best, in terms of | 0:05:39 | 0:05:44 | |
delivering for the British people
when it comes to Brexit. On the | 0:05:44 | 0:05:48 | |
China trip she promises in that
interview that there will be more | 0:05:48 | 0:05:51 | |
jobs in the UK and more British
products will be sold in China as a | 0:05:51 | 0:05:55 | |
result. I think she will be pretty
pleased. She has had the cloud of | 0:05:55 | 0:06:00 | |
wrecks it hanging over her and
questions over her leadership. On | 0:06:00 | 0:06:03 | |
the Chinese side they have said, the
Premier, that despite Brexit, | 0:06:03 | 0:06:06 | |
whatever happens, there will be no
change to the UK - China | 0:06:06 | 0:06:12 | |
relationship and the reality is this
is the beginning of strategic | 0:06:12 | 0:06:15 | |
deepening. That's what both sides
want and irrespective of whether | 0:06:15 | 0:06:19 | |
Theresa May says on the job or not
this is a long-term prospect in | 0:06:19 | 0:06:23 | |
terms of the UK and China and their
trade relationship and beyond. | 0:06:23 | 0:06:27 | |
Thanks very much. | 0:06:27 | 0:06:32 | |
Police investigating the death of
Natalie Wood more than three decades | 0:06:32 | 0:06:36 | |
ago say her husband Robert Wagner is
now being treated as a person of | 0:06:36 | 0:06:40 | |
interest. | 0:06:40 | 0:06:41 | |
The actress was found dead
after going missing from a yacht off | 0:06:41 | 0:06:45 | |
the coast of California,
37 years ago. | 0:06:45 | 0:06:47 | |
Our Los Angeles correspondent
James Cook has more details. | 0:06:47 | 0:06:49 | |
Natalie Wood was a Hollywood
superstar with three Oscar | 0:06:49 | 0:06:52 | |
nominations when she died suddenly
in 1981 at the age of just 43. Her | 0:06:52 | 0:06:57 | |
body was found floating in the water
off the coast of California. The | 0:06:57 | 0:07:04 | |
yacht on which she was sailing with
her husband Robert Wagner, a co-star | 0:07:04 | 0:07:08 | |
and the boat's captain. Initially
the death was ruled an accident but | 0:07:08 | 0:07:11 | |
the enquiry was reopened in 2011.
Lease now say to new witnesses have | 0:07:11 | 0:07:17 | |
corroborated accounts of a fight
between Robert Wagner and Natalie | 0:07:17 | 0:07:21 | |
Wood on the night she disappeared.
Detectives say it appears she was | 0:07:21 | 0:07:24 | |
the victim of an assault and they
believe her husband was the last | 0:07:24 | 0:07:28 | |
person to see her alive. Police say
Robert Wagner has refused to speak | 0:07:28 | 0:07:34 | |
to them since the case was reopened.
They've not declared the death of | 0:07:34 | 0:07:38 | |
murder and no charges have been
filed against the act. He is now 87 | 0:07:38 | 0:07:43 | |
years old and has not commented on
the latest developments. | 0:07:43 | 0:07:50 | |
The elder son of the late Cuban
leader Fidel Castro has died in | 0:07:51 | 0:07:55 | |
Havana at the age of 68. Given state
media reported that he took his own | 0:07:55 | 0:08:03 | |
life after a battle with depression.
He was a nuclear physicist and | 0:08:03 | 0:08:07 | |
worked for Cuba's honest government. | 0:08:07 | 0:08:12 | |
The NSPCC has accued the Government
of "dragging its feet" when it comes | 0:08:12 | 0:08:16 | |
to protecting children online. | 0:08:16 | 0:08:17 | |
The charity says ministers have
failed to implement half | 0:08:17 | 0:08:19 | |
of the recommendations made
in a report, which was commissioned | 0:08:19 | 0:08:22 | |
a decade ago. | 0:08:22 | 0:08:23 | |
MPs say they are planning
a voluntary code as part | 0:08:23 | 0:08:25 | |
of the Internet Safety Strategy. | 0:08:25 | 0:08:27 | |
Sarah Campbell reports. | 0:08:27 | 0:08:33 | |
This is the online generation. Over
the past decade the internet and its | 0:08:34 | 0:08:38 | |
use has expanded rapidly. Instagram,
Snapchat and WhatsApp didn't even | 0:08:38 | 0:08:42 | |
exist in 2008. Back then this
professor was asked by the then | 0:08:42 | 0:08:46 | |
Prime Minister to look into
children's' safety online, ten years | 0:08:46 | 0:08:51 | |
on the NSPCC seemed less than half
of the recommendations have been put | 0:08:51 | 0:08:55 | |
into place. UK Council for Child
Internet Safety was established. | 0:08:55 | 0:09:00 | |
Video games now have to have an age
rating, but the charity says there's | 0:09:00 | 0:09:05 | |
been no improvement to parental
controls for games consoles and no | 0:09:05 | 0:09:08 | |
code of practice is yet in place for
the online industry. The government | 0:09:08 | 0:09:12 | |
has really dragged their feet in
implementing recommendations from | 0:09:12 | 0:09:17 | |
what was a landmark report ten years
ago by the professor that was | 0:09:17 | 0:09:22 | |
supposed to be a comprehensive
package to keep children safe. Those | 0:09:22 | 0:09:25 | |
measures haven't been acted on and
is clearly essential that now we do | 0:09:25 | 0:09:29 | |
see the government take steps, in
particular introducing a code of | 0:09:29 | 0:09:33 | |
practice and an independent
regulator to make social networks | 0:09:33 | 0:09:35 | |
keep children safe. The government
says it does intend to introduce a | 0:09:35 | 0:09:40 | |
voluntary code of practice for
social media networks and it says | 0:09:40 | 0:09:43 | |
changes to the law will also be
considered to compel companies to | 0:09:43 | 0:09:47 | |
reduce the risks they are science
pose the children. -- their science. | 0:09:47 | 0:09:54 | |
Prince Harry and Meghan Markle
presented awards at the second | 0:09:54 | 0:09:59 | |
annual Endeavour Fund Awards last
night, celebrating the achievements | 0:09:59 | 0:10:01 | |
of wounded, injured and sick
servicemen and women. | 0:10:01 | 0:10:03 | |
Ms Markle's experience
in the spotlight came in handy | 0:10:03 | 0:10:06 | |
as she helped out her co-presenter
who struggled with the envelope | 0:10:06 | 0:10:09 | |
containing the names
of the nominees. | 0:10:09 | 0:10:12 | |
Always useful to have someone help
you an envelope. Always! Good | 0:10:12 | 0:10:17 | |
morning. I am talking funding and
good news for some of the sports, | 0:10:17 | 0:10:25 | |
new Paralympic sports and stars of
badminton for example, it seems | 0:10:25 | 0:10:31 | |
money for medals. Given what they've
done a world champion level they | 0:10:31 | 0:10:35 | |
could get funding.
Wasn't that always the way? | 0:10:35 | 0:10:39 | |
It was cut for badminton. Stars like
shorter cocci has been world | 0:10:39 | 0:10:45 | |
champion twice at bouldering, she
can now get from the -- funding. | 0:10:45 | 0:11:02 | |
That's like climbing. | 0:11:02 | 0:11:04 | |
There's a rethink over funding
and money for five new Olympic | 0:11:04 | 0:11:07 | |
and Paralympic sports too. | 0:11:07 | 0:11:14 | |
UK sport has had a change of heart. | 0:11:14 | 0:11:16 | |
£600,000 is given to archery
and badminton ahead | 0:11:16 | 0:11:18 | |
of the Tokyo Games in 2020,
while Para-taekwondo, | 0:11:18 | 0:11:21 | |
Para-badminton, sport climbing,
karate and BMX freestyle | 0:11:21 | 0:11:26 | |
will receive a share
of over £1 million too. | 0:11:26 | 0:11:29 | |
More bad news for England women's
manager Phil Neville. | 0:11:29 | 0:11:33 | |
His first choice goalkeeper
Karen Bardsley was badly injured | 0:11:33 | 0:11:36 | |
in just the second minute of last
night's match between her side | 0:11:36 | 0:11:39 | |
Manchester City and Chelsea. | 0:11:39 | 0:11:47 | |
The star of the Australian Open,
Kyle Edmund, will miss | 0:11:47 | 0:11:50 | |
Great Britain's Davis Cup tie
against Spain, which gets | 0:11:50 | 0:11:52 | |
under way today. | 0:11:52 | 0:11:53 | |
The British number one developed
a hip injury during last week's | 0:11:53 | 0:11:56 | |
Aussie Open semi-final defeat
by Marin Cilic and wasn't able | 0:11:56 | 0:11:59 | |
to recover in time. | 0:11:59 | 0:12:02 | |
And find out at 6:30am why
Warrington skipper Chris Hill, | 0:12:02 | 0:12:05 | |
here on the left, had
to run to hospital midway | 0:12:05 | 0:12:07 | |
through his side's loss to Leeds,
in the opening game | 0:12:07 | 0:12:10 | |
of the Super League season. | 0:12:10 | 0:12:11 | |
A big match, opening day of the
season, his team as well Warrington | 0:12:11 | 0:12:18 | |
have already made all of their
replacements, so he leaves the field | 0:12:18 | 0:12:21 | |
and leaves his side one man down.
Why does he go to hospital? A good | 0:12:21 | 0:12:26 | |
reason, I would say!
His teammates have forgiven him? So | 0:12:26 | 0:12:31 | |
basically he got the call saying his
wife was going into labour. | 0:12:31 | 0:12:35 | |
Fabulous!
But some people say they would have | 0:12:35 | 0:12:39 | |
stayed on the pitch for another ten
minutes. I would have gone. | 0:12:39 | 0:12:42 | |
But he did leave his team one man
down. | 0:12:42 | 0:12:45 | |
I think Leeds would have won anyway,
but what would you have done? | 0:12:45 | 0:12:50 | |
You are not going to look back on
that and say, I wish I played those | 0:12:50 | 0:12:56 | |
extra ten minutes.
It's a 1-off moment and you don't | 0:12:56 | 0:13:00 | |
know how long labour will last or
how quickly it will be over. | 0:13:00 | 0:13:04 | |
This was last night?
Yeah. | 0:13:04 | 0:13:06 | |
Do we know if everything was OK?
That's what I'm trying to find out. | 0:13:06 | 0:13:11 | |
If you know anything, please get in
touch! | 0:13:11 | 0:13:14 | |
We need the end of the story.
Fingers crossed. | 0:13:14 | 0:13:17 | |
We need all of the details.
Thanks. | 0:13:17 | 0:13:24 | |
Carol is dressed appropriately for
the weather this morning because | 0:13:26 | 0:13:30 | |
there are cold spells coming along.
So you are all in blue, to match | 0:13:30 | 0:13:34 | |
your map.
That's right. | 0:13:34 | 0:13:36 | |
your map.
That's right. Lending with the sea | 0:13:36 | 0:13:37 | |
as well. This morning it's a chilly
start to the day. Some of us have | 0:13:37 | 0:13:42 | |
temperatures around freezing or
below and for others it's not as | 0:13:42 | 0:13:45 | |
cold as it was this time yesterday.
Many of us will have seen is like | 0:13:45 | 0:13:50 | |
this. A beautiful Weather Watchers
picture. The forecast today is sunny | 0:13:50 | 0:13:55 | |
and chilly. The wind is not as
strong as yesterday and we could see | 0:13:55 | 0:14:01 | |
a little bit of frost first thing,
but will be about it. We have a | 0:14:01 | 0:14:06 | |
weather front sinking south and you
can also see that we have showers | 0:14:06 | 0:14:09 | |
coming in across eastern England and
a keen wind. We've also got showers | 0:14:09 | 0:14:14 | |
across Northern Ireland and Scotland
and Wales and south-west England. | 0:14:14 | 0:14:18 | |
Especially in Devon and Cornwall.
The high pressure is across us, so | 0:14:18 | 0:14:22 | |
things are fairly settled. Plenty of
sunshine around today and in the | 0:14:22 | 0:14:27 | |
light winds it will still be chilly,
but not as cold as it has done of | 0:14:27 | 0:14:32 | |
late. Temperatures find in the north
-- five in the north to about seven | 0:14:32 | 0:14:37 | |
or eight further south. Heading
through this evening and overnight, | 0:14:37 | 0:14:40 | |
a weather front which is already
coming across the west with the | 0:14:40 | 0:14:44 | |
cloud will introduce rain initially
to Northern Ireland and we will see | 0:14:44 | 0:14:48 | |
snow on higher ground. The same for
western Scotland. Snow on higher | 0:14:48 | 0:14:51 | |
ground. It will come into Wales and
south-west England. Snow on higher | 0:14:51 | 0:14:57 | |
ground in Wales. A little bit of
sleet mixed in. Low temperatures | 0:14:57 | 0:15:00 | |
could see ice on untreated surfaces.
Further south, three degrees in | 0:15:00 | 0:15:06 | |
London. If you are stepping up first
thing tomorrow it will feel chilly. | 0:15:06 | 0:15:10 | |
This is a weather front and tomorrow
it will move eastwards. Just how far | 0:15:10 | 0:15:17 | |
is still open to question, but this
is what we think at the moment. As | 0:15:17 | 0:15:21 | |
it moves east it will still produce
no, even a modest hills across | 0:15:21 | 0:15:25 | |
Scotland. We see some snow largely
on the heels of northern England, in | 0:15:25 | 0:15:30 | |
the Pennines for example, and as it
moves through Northern Ireland. | 0:15:30 | 0:15:33 | |
There could be sleet in some heavy
showers as they move across from the | 0:15:33 | 0:15:37 | |
west. Ahead of it brighter skies.
Again, no heat wave. For in | 0:15:37 | 0:15:43 | |
Aberdeen, five in Norwich, seven in
Plymouth. Moving into Sunday, again | 0:15:43 | 0:15:50 | |
a lot of dry weather around. Breezy.
There will be a few showers. Also | 0:15:50 | 0:15:56 | |
some brighter spells at times out
towards the west. The temperatures | 0:15:56 | 0:16:00 | |
range, 4-6. In some of those
showers, with the wind coming in | 0:16:00 | 0:16:05 | |
from the east, a bitterly cold
direction for us. We could have | 0:16:05 | 0:16:10 | |
wintriness as well, a mixture of
rain, sleet and possibly snow. Maybe | 0:16:10 | 0:16:14 | |
even in the south-east. These are
showers and not all of us will | 0:16:14 | 0:16:20 | |
either. Then as we head into Monday
it remains cold. Some of us again | 0:16:20 | 0:16:25 | |
even next week will have further
spells of snow. And we are not out | 0:16:25 | 0:16:31 | |
of winter just yet. Not big news for
you, Naga, but possibly Charlie. | 0:16:31 | 0:16:39 | |
Let's take a look at today's papers. | 0:16:39 | 0:16:44 | |
Good morning. How are you? It isn't
a weird question, I am asking. It | 0:16:44 | 0:16:49 | |
sometimes is from you. Yeah. Here we
go. Let's look at the papers. I am | 0:16:49 | 0:16:58 | |
just saying hello! The front page,
quite a few of the newspapers | 0:16:58 | 0:17:01 | |
enjoying the pictures of Meghan
Markle and Prince Harry attending | 0:17:01 | 0:17:05 | |
their first evening function
together. A lot of interest in what | 0:17:05 | 0:17:09 | |
she is wearing, of course the other
papers as well, and the NHS stories, | 0:17:09 | 0:17:14 | |
this is about pay-outs for blunders,
the amounts of money being paid out | 0:17:14 | 0:17:19 | |
through the health service, just be
secretary there saying alarming | 0:17:19 | 0:17:25 | |
amounts of money. They are pending
or having been paid out in | 0:17:25 | 0:17:29 | |
negligence. The front page of the
Mirror has another NHS story, the | 0:17:29 | 0:17:35 | |
poll shows 73% would pay more to
save the NHS. Most of us would pay | 0:17:35 | 0:17:39 | |
an extra pound a week. The pictures
on the top of the paper here is a | 0:17:39 | 0:17:45 | |
story we are covering, we understand
that 37 years on, investigators | 0:17:45 | 0:17:48 | |
looking into the death of Natalie
Wood, the Hollywood actress, she | 0:17:48 | 0:17:54 | |
died 37 years ago, they have now
named Robert Wagner her husband as a | 0:17:54 | 0:18:00 | |
person of interest. The Daily Mail,
more curiosity about who is | 0:18:00 | 0:18:05 | |
designing the outfits for Kate and
Meghan Markle, the main story is the | 0:18:05 | 0:18:10 | |
lead story about prostate cancer, a
bigger killer than breast cancer for | 0:18:10 | 0:18:15 | |
the first time. More on that
throughout the program. Another NHS | 0:18:15 | 0:18:22 | |
story on the front page of the time,
looking at the cost of moisturiser, | 0:18:22 | 0:18:26 | |
saying the owner of the high street
chemist Boots charging £1500 for | 0:18:26 | 0:18:33 | |
single pots of moisturiser but
others says have sold for less than | 0:18:33 | 0:18:36 | |
£2 and a bill was sent to the health
service is specially made cream for | 0:18:36 | 0:18:41 | |
patients with skin problems in 2016,
this is according to payment records | 0:18:41 | 0:18:44 | |
being seen and a picture there of
course of Robert Wagner and Natalie | 0:18:44 | 0:18:48 | |
Wood, talking about him being a
person of interest. Are you alright | 0:18:48 | 0:18:53 | |
then? I am. Clearly, I was up late
tonight but before last but looking | 0:18:53 | 0:18:59 | |
at the tech results, it has been a
really big day for an update on how | 0:18:59 | 0:19:03 | |
they are faring, they don't make the
papers because they were so late | 0:19:03 | 0:19:08 | |
that Apple reporting their biggest
ever profit figure company in the | 0:19:08 | 0:19:11 | |
world, they made 14 billion dollars
in profit, around £11 billion, for | 0:19:11 | 0:19:17 | |
the last three months of last year.
It is extraordinary. Were they the | 0:19:17 | 0:19:22 | |
previous record holders vote? They
have always been up there. The big | 0:19:22 | 0:19:27 | |
race this year is to become the
first trillion dollar valued company | 0:19:27 | 0:19:31 | |
in the world and the races between
Amazon and Apple. Overnight turning | 0:19:31 | 0:19:38 | |
to a good quarter profit of £2
billion, its revenue is up as well | 0:19:38 | 0:19:41 | |
but interesting, Netflix have the
best of Scrivener numbers are pretty | 0:19:41 | 0:19:50 | |
sharply as well, HBO, particularly a
US story but Netflix around the | 0:19:50 | 0:19:54 | |
world signing up 8.3 million
customers in the last three months | 0:19:54 | 0:19:58 | |
-- subscriber numbers. It was
expected to be around 6.3 but | 0:19:58 | 0:20:05 | |
clearly many more of us are signing
up to use their services. Horses for | 0:20:05 | 0:20:10 | |
courses, why soon fences at
Cheltenham and Grand National could | 0:20:10 | 0:20:12 | |
be neon yellow. White. Even bright
blue! Why? What colour are they now? | 0:20:12 | 0:20:20 | |
Dark orange, dark red. Green. Ring
predominantly. This is how it is. -- | 0:20:20 | 0:20:29 | |
Green. It isn't to jazz up the sport
but because they have found that | 0:20:29 | 0:20:33 | |
horses don't see orange and red very
well. Not how we do. So to make it | 0:20:33 | 0:20:41 | |
more say for them, saying that the
big fences coming up, they are | 0:20:41 | 0:20:44 | |
experimenting to see if they paint
the borders neon yellow, white, | 0:20:44 | 0:20:48 | |
blue. If the logic is you are
telling the horse about what is | 0:20:48 | 0:20:53 | |
coming up, why isn't the colourblind
at the top of the fence? It is where | 0:20:53 | 0:20:57 | |
the board is to hold the bush in
place if you like. I will, it looks | 0:20:57 | 0:21:02 | |
like it is imprinted on... It the
hedge in place. That tends to be the | 0:21:02 | 0:21:07 | |
colour but horses cannot see it,
apparently, according to research, | 0:21:07 | 0:21:10 | |
it is ongoing at Exeter University.
A quick scientific experiment, | 0:21:10 | 0:21:16 | |
according to latest science Daniel
Craig is the worst looking James | 0:21:16 | 0:21:20 | |
Bond, why? Because of the way that
you measure a face. There is the | 0:21:20 | 0:21:24 | |
true perfection, you find the golden
ratio, I will demonstrate this right | 0:21:24 | 0:21:29 | |
now. Charlie. If that's what you are
brandishing a ruler? Let me. Help | 0:21:29 | 0:21:35 | |
me. I'm not sure with this. We
measure that we measure the wits, O! | 0:21:35 | 0:21:48 | |
-- width. The golden ratio... Your
face is as wide as the length of | 0:21:51 | 0:21:55 | |
your golden ratio is nowhere near.
That gets my hair in place in the | 0:21:55 | 0:22:01 | |
rank length of the face divided by
the wits of the face, the golden | 0:22:01 | 0:22:05 | |
ratio is 1.16? 1.6. You were nowhere
near it. You make me nervous holding | 0:22:05 | 0:22:14 | |
that ruler. Please come back
sometime. 6:32 AM. Today is the | 0:22:14 | 0:22:20 | |
final day of the May's visit to
China. She has insisted she is | 0:22:20 | 0:22:25 | |
delivering what the British people
want when it comes to Brexit, | 0:22:25 | 0:22:29 | |
despite persisting criticism from
within her own party. Speaking to | 0:22:29 | 0:22:34 | |
the BBC, she insisted she is | 0:22:34 | 0:22:35 | |
setting out a clear vision to the
rest of the world. It is important | 0:22:35 | 0:22:40 | |
that we deliver what people want
which is control of our money, our | 0:22:40 | 0:22:43 | |
borders and our laws and it is what
we are doing but what I am showing | 0:22:43 | 0:22:48 | |
in China is how we can ensure that
we actually enhance our trade with | 0:22:48 | 0:22:52 | |
the rest of the world as well. Why
do we want to do that? It is good | 0:22:52 | 0:22:56 | |
for people in Britain, jobs in
Britain. Prime Minister, can you | 0:22:56 | 0:23:00 | |
stay on? People are asking you to be
clear about your priorities. How | 0:23:00 | 0:23:03 | |
long do use day on, do you believe?
Let's be clear, I set out what my | 0:23:03 | 0:23:09 | |
vision is, I have setup and I have
said two people at every stage when | 0:23:09 | 0:23:13 | |
we can fill in the detail we will do
so and that is exactly... How long | 0:23:13 | 0:23:17 | |
can you stay on? The idea that we
have to have-we are about to | 0:23:17 | 0:23:22 | |
complete the negotiation with the EU
on our future relationship is wrong, | 0:23:22 | 0:23:26 | |
we are at the beginning of the
process of negotiating with the | 0:23:26 | 0:23:29 | |
European Union so we will be out
there in ensuring that the deal we | 0:23:29 | 0:23:32 | |
get delivers on what the British
people want. That is what this is | 0:23:32 | 0:23:36 | |
about. I know that what they want is
good job of themselves and their | 0:23:36 | 0:23:41 | |
children and that is what it is
important to me to be here in China | 0:23:41 | 0:23:45 | |
where businesses have been signing
deals, selling more UK products, | 0:23:45 | 0:23:50 | |
great UK products, into China and
ensuring there are more jobs to | 0:23:50 | 0:23:53 | |
people in the UK. Do you want to be
the Tory leader at the next general | 0:23:53 | 0:23:57 | |
election? I have been asked this on
a number of occasions and I said | 0:23:57 | 0:24:01 | |
clearly that are my political career
I have served my country and have | 0:24:01 | 0:24:05 | |
served my party and I am not a
quicker, I am in this because there | 0:24:05 | 0:24:09 | |
is a job to be done here which is
delivering the British people and | 0:24:09 | 0:24:13 | |
doing it in a way that ensures the
future prosperity of our country, | 0:24:13 | 0:24:17 | |
global Britain, global Britain is a
real visions of the United Kingdom. | 0:24:17 | 0:24:20 | |
I watch the British people to see a
government which is delivering for | 0:24:20 | 0:24:25 | |
them around the world and that is
that the what we are doing. Our view | 0:24:25 | 0:24:29 | |
is the day after day the Tory party
fighting amongst themselves. How do | 0:24:29 | 0:24:32 | |
you reassert authority? I am doing
with the British people want which | 0:24:32 | 0:24:36 | |
is delivering on Brexit but also
getting out around the world | 0:24:36 | 0:24:39 | |
ensuring that we bring jobs but to
Britain. Companies will be selling | 0:24:39 | 0:24:43 | |
more great British products to China
as a result of this trip, there will | 0:24:43 | 0:24:47 | |
be more people in jobs in the UK as
a result of this trip. But global | 0:24:47 | 0:24:51 | |
Britain in action. Prime Minister,
thank you very much. Thank you. We | 0:24:51 | 0:24:57 | |
have been discussing some of her
comments throughout the morning. | 0:24:57 | 0:25:00 | |
Something now to make you smile. | 0:25:00 | 0:25:08 | |
What do you get if you cross a polar
bear and a GoPro camera? | 0:25:08 | 0:25:12 | |
On the serious side,
you get some brilliant research | 0:25:12 | 0:25:14 | |
of how the animals are coping
with the diminishing Arctic ice. | 0:25:14 | 0:25:17 | |
On the flip side, you get
some brilliant pictures, | 0:25:17 | 0:25:19 | |
like these ones in our
science correspondent | 0:25:19 | 0:25:21 | |
Victoria Gill's report. | 0:25:21 | 0:25:22 | |
A poll of their's few of the Arctic.
-- Polar bear. These pictures were | 0:25:22 | 0:25:30 | |
taken from cameras inside tracking
collars, scientists fitted them June | 0:25:30 | 0:25:35 | |
19 politesse. In a study carried out
over three seasons in the Arctic, | 0:25:35 | 0:25:39 | |
the researchers set out to find out
whether animals are getting enough | 0:25:39 | 0:25:42 | |
to eat during the critical spring
thaw. But a light studies have shown | 0:25:42 | 0:25:46 | |
that Arctic sea ice is decreasing at
a rate of about 14% every decade. | 0:25:46 | 0:25:52 | |
And the polar bears need that to
hunt and eat, their main and most | 0:25:52 | 0:25:56 | |
calorie rich prey, seals. That was
well is fitting them with GPS | 0:25:56 | 0:26:00 | |
tracking, camera containing collars,
the research is injected the polar | 0:26:00 | 0:26:04 | |
bears to a metabolic resale. --
Tracer. This revealed that wild | 0:26:04 | 0:26:11 | |
pears have a higher metabolic rate
than previously thought. And that | 0:26:11 | 0:26:17 | |
most of them were unable to catch a
food to meet their energy needs. The | 0:26:17 | 0:26:23 | |
scientist say this new technology
following their every move and that | 0:26:23 | 0:26:26 | |
every meal reveals just how these
predators's survival will be | 0:26:26 | 0:26:30 | |
affected as the icy environment
transforms around them. | 0:26:30 | 0:26:37 | |
transforms around them. They are
amazing pictures. Just wonderful. | 0:26:38 | 0:26:39 | |
Lovely. It is 6:26 AM. | 0:26:39 | 0:26:44 | |
Time now to get the news,
travel and weather where you are. | 0:26:44 | 0:30:07 | |
in half an hour. | 0:30:07 | 0:30:08 | |
Plenty more on our website
at the usual address. | 0:30:08 | 0:30:11 | |
Now, though, it's back
to Naga and Charlie. | 0:30:11 | 0:30:13 | |
Bye for now. | 0:30:13 | 0:30:15 | |
Hello, this is Breakfast,
with Naga Munchetty and Charlie | 0:30:15 | 0:30:17 | |
Stayt. | 0:30:17 | 0:30:21 | |
It's Friday, February 2nd. | 0:30:21 | 0:30:22 | |
Coming up on Breakfast today: | 0:30:22 | 0:30:27 | |
There was mixed news for technology
firm Apple overnight, | 0:30:27 | 0:30:30 | |
with profits increasing,
but a fall in the number | 0:30:30 | 0:30:32 | |
of iPhones sold. | 0:30:32 | 0:30:33 | |
Ben will be here to tell us
which companies are hot | 0:30:33 | 0:30:36 | |
on its heels. | 0:30:36 | 0:30:39 | |
How smart you in the office? | 0:30:39 | 0:30:44 | |
Just one in ten British workers
puts a suit on to go | 0:30:44 | 0:30:47 | |
into the office. | 0:30:47 | 0:30:48 | |
We'll discuss whether
the traditional business suit | 0:30:48 | 0:30:50 | |
and tie has had its day. | 0:30:50 | 0:30:51 | |
And we'll meet the man taking record
breaking to a new level. | 0:30:51 | 0:30:55 | |
John Farnworth's aiming to set
a record by doing "keepy-uppies" | 0:30:55 | 0:30:57 | |
while trekking to
Everest's base camp. | 0:30:57 | 0:30:59 | |
He'll be with us just after 8:30am. | 0:30:59 | 0:31:01 | |
Here's a summary of today's main
stories from BBC News. | 0:31:01 | 0:31:04 | |
The number of men dying in the UK
from prostate cancer has overtaken | 0:31:04 | 0:31:07 | |
the number of women killed by breast
cancer for the first time. | 0:31:07 | 0:31:10 | |
The charity Prostate Cancer UK says
advances in diagnosis and treatment | 0:31:10 | 0:31:13 | |
of breast cancer have paid off | 0:31:13 | 0:31:15 | |
and similar benefits could be seen
if more money was allocated | 0:31:15 | 0:31:18 | |
to the fight against
prostate cancer. | 0:31:18 | 0:31:22 | |
It really is time to actually get
behind this and to realise that we | 0:31:22 | 0:31:26 | |
need to get on top of it now because
it is just going to become more | 0:31:26 | 0:31:30 | |
common and it will kill more
meaningfully aren't able to do that. | 0:31:30 | 0:31:34 | |
Health leaders have written
to the Justice Secretary, | 0:31:34 | 0:31:36 | |
urging him to reform the pay-out
system for negligence claims | 0:31:36 | 0:31:39 | |
against the NHS. | 0:31:39 | 0:31:40 | |
They say the NHS would have
to pay up to £65 billion | 0:31:40 | 0:31:43 | |
if all current claims
were successful. | 0:31:43 | 0:31:46 | |
The government says it is looking
at measures to control costs in | 0:31:46 | 0:31:50 | |
such cases. | 0:31:50 | 0:31:51 | |
Theresa May insists she's delivering
what British people want on Brexit | 0:31:51 | 0:31:54 | |
and setting out a clear vision
to the rest of the world. | 0:31:54 | 0:31:58 | |
Downing Street says billions
of pounds' worth of deals have been | 0:31:58 | 0:32:01 | |
signed during her three day visit
to China, which ends later. | 0:32:01 | 0:32:04 | |
Earlier, the Prime Minister
spoke to the BBC. | 0:32:04 | 0:32:10 | |
IMD win what the British people
want, which is delivering on Brexit, | 0:32:10 | 0:32:15 | |
but also getting around the world,
ensuring we bring jobs back to | 0:32:15 | 0:32:19 | |
Britain. Companies will be selling
more great British products to China | 0:32:19 | 0:32:23 | |
as a result of this trip. There will
be more people in jobs in the UK as | 0:32:23 | 0:32:28 | |
a result of the trip. That's global
written in action. -- Britain. But | 0:32:28 | 0:32:34 | |
go straight to our correspondent.
This is a determined and up would | 0:32:34 | 0:32:38 | |
looking Theresa May, but the
backdrop has been amongst a lot of | 0:32:38 | 0:32:42 | |
criticism? Well, she's come here for
this three-day visit which ends | 0:32:42 | 0:32:48 | |
today with two things. Questions
about leadership, some of it from | 0:32:48 | 0:32:53 | |
people on her own side, and of
course the uncertainty and | 0:32:53 | 0:32:57 | |
instability for both her and the
people in the Chinese leadership | 0:32:57 | 0:33:01 | |
over Brexit and what the polls. But
her view has been that this trip | 0:33:01 | 0:33:05 | |
demonstrates, as she said, that
written is more outward looking, is | 0:33:05 | 0:33:11 | |
a global trading nation and she has
come here with the intention of | 0:33:11 | 0:33:15 | |
increasing trade. China is only the
UK's eighth biggest export market. | 0:33:15 | 0:33:19 | |
That's got to improve if the UK
economy is going to grow | 0:33:19 | 0:33:26 | |
sustainably. So deals have been done
and she insists that those deals | 0:33:26 | 0:33:31 | |
that have been done will bring as
you heard more jobs to the UK, more | 0:33:31 | 0:33:35 | |
British products sold in this
country. I think broadly speaking | 0:33:35 | 0:33:40 | |
the Chinese have reassured her that
whatever happens with Brexit the | 0:33:40 | 0:33:45 | |
relationship between the China and
UK won't change. This has been about | 0:33:45 | 0:33:49 | |
deepening, both sides have used that
word, this strategic relationship | 0:33:49 | 0:33:54 | |
and whether Theresa May survives
that relationship or not is | 0:33:54 | 0:33:57 | |
important for the UK and for China
top white thanks for the moment. -- | 0:33:57 | 0:34:01 | |
thanks for the moment. | 0:34:01 | 0:34:03 | |
Police investigating the death
of Hollywood star Natalie Wood 37 | 0:34:03 | 0:34:06 | |
years ago say her husband
Robert Wagner is now being treated | 0:34:06 | 0:34:09 | |
as a person of interest. | 0:34:09 | 0:34:10 | |
The actress was found dead
after going missing from a yacht off | 0:34:10 | 0:34:13 | |
the coast of California. | 0:34:13 | 0:34:17 | |
The eldest son of the late
Cuban leader Fidel Castro | 0:34:17 | 0:34:20 | |
has died in Havana aged 68. | 0:34:20 | 0:34:23 | |
Cuba's state media reported that
Fidel Castro Diaz-Balart, | 0:34:23 | 0:34:26 | |
widely known as Fidelito,
took his own life after a long | 0:34:26 | 0:34:29 | |
battle with depression. | 0:34:29 | 0:34:29 | |
He was a nuclear physicist
and worked for Cuba's communist | 0:34:29 | 0:34:32 | |
government. | 0:34:32 | 0:34:33 | |
The Government is facing criticism
for failing to implement adequate | 0:34:33 | 0:34:36 | |
safeguards for children online. | 0:34:36 | 0:34:37 | |
In 2008, the Byron Review,
commissioned by Gordon Brown, | 0:34:37 | 0:34:39 | |
put forward 38 recommendations
on internet safety. | 0:34:39 | 0:34:45 | |
The NSPCC says fewer than half have
been properly implemented. | 0:34:45 | 0:34:50 | |
Ministers say they are planning
a voluntary code as part | 0:34:50 | 0:34:52 | |
of their forthcoming
Internet Safety Strategy. | 0:34:52 | 0:34:56 | |
Health experts are calling
on the government to fully fund IVF | 0:34:56 | 0:35:01 | |
treatment to help cut the number
of multiple pregnancies that | 0:35:01 | 0:35:04 | |
are riskier for mothers and babies. | 0:35:04 | 0:35:06 | |
The Royal College of Obstetricians
and Gynaecologists says the health | 0:35:06 | 0:35:08 | |
and financial burden these
pregnancies pose on the NHS | 0:35:08 | 0:35:11 | |
can't be overstated. | 0:35:11 | 0:35:13 | |
Prince Harry and Meghan Markle
presented awards at an event last | 0:35:13 | 0:35:17 | |
night which celebrated
the achievements of wounded, | 0:35:17 | 0:35:19 | |
injured and sick
servicemen and women. | 0:35:19 | 0:35:22 | |
Ms Markle's experience
in the spotlight came in handy | 0:35:22 | 0:35:27 | |
as she helped out her co-presenter,
who struggled with the envelope | 0:35:27 | 0:35:30 | |
containing the names
of the nominees. | 0:35:30 | 0:35:35 | |
Over to the sport and of course
Prince Harry, all of those things, | 0:35:35 | 0:35:41 | |
sport, are close to his heart. I'm
sure he will be pleased with this | 0:35:41 | 0:35:45 | |
news. Remember when funding was
withdrawn from sports like badminton | 0:35:45 | 0:35:50 | |
ahead of the Tokyo Olympics and
Paralympics? Now, for the likes of | 0:35:50 | 0:35:57 | |
the Adcocks, there has been a change
of heart and a welcome U-turn for | 0:35:57 | 0:36:01 | |
many. Both sports will now receive
funding of over £6,000 each, archery | 0:36:01 | 0:36:07 | |
and badminton, and five new sports,
including sports climbing and | 0:36:07 | 0:36:12 | |
karate, will receive a share of over
£1 million. Last year the Adcocks | 0:36:12 | 0:36:21 | |
one blonde -- won bronze at the
Olympics. UK sport has recognised we | 0:36:21 | 0:36:29 | |
have the potential. So to get
backing from them is positive. Good | 0:36:29 | 0:36:33 | |
day at the office. We've worked
really hard and to get that medal, | 0:36:33 | 0:36:39 | |
all of our hard work rewarded, it's
a really positive step and we are | 0:36:39 | 0:36:43 | |
really happy about that. | 0:36:43 | 0:36:45 | |
Things don't seem to be getting any
easier for Phil Neville, | 0:36:45 | 0:36:50 | |
who's started his role
as England women's manager. | 0:36:50 | 0:36:54 | |
After the controversy
over his appointment, | 0:36:54 | 0:36:56 | |
he was at Kingsmeadow last night
to cast an eye over Chelsea | 0:36:56 | 0:36:59 | |
and Manchester City's
England players. | 0:36:59 | 0:37:00 | |
And he wouldn't have
wanted to see this. | 0:37:00 | 0:37:03 | |
England goalkeeper Karen Bardsley
was stretchered off after falling | 0:37:03 | 0:37:05 | |
heavily on her shoulder in just
the second minute of the match. | 0:37:05 | 0:37:08 | |
Look at the height. Write down on
top. | 0:37:08 | 0:37:12 | |
The game was held up for nine
minutes while she was treated | 0:37:12 | 0:37:16 | |
on the pitch. | 0:37:16 | 0:37:16 | |
The game ended 0-0. | 0:37:16 | 0:37:19 | |
She has gone off to hospital to be
checked. She's got a little bit of | 0:37:19 | 0:37:23 | |
pain in her arm and her shoulders,
but she is talking and she seems, | 0:37:23 | 0:37:27 | |
you know, OK and in good spirits, so
we will trust the medical team to | 0:37:27 | 0:37:32 | |
carry on from there. | 0:37:32 | 0:37:33 | |
The Super League season got back
under way last night. | 0:37:33 | 0:37:36 | |
There were victories for Hull FC
and the champions Leeds. | 0:37:36 | 0:37:41 | |
It was certainly "labour
intensive", though, | 0:37:41 | 0:37:43 | |
for Warrington skipper Chris Hill,
seen here on the left. | 0:37:43 | 0:37:46 | |
He had to leave midway
through the 16-12 loss to Leeds | 0:37:46 | 0:37:49 | |
because his wife went into labour. | 0:37:49 | 0:37:57 | |
So he missed a great try
from England teammate Ryan Hall, | 0:37:57 | 0:38:00 | |
although he had more important
things to worry about last night. | 0:38:00 | 0:38:03 | |
Kyle Edmund is set to miss
Great Britain's Davis Cup tie | 0:38:03 | 0:38:06 | |
against Spain, which
gets under way today. | 0:38:06 | 0:38:07 | |
He developed a hip injury
during last week's Australian Open | 0:38:07 | 0:38:10 | |
semi-final defeat by Marin Cilic
and wasn't able to get over | 0:38:10 | 0:38:13 | |
it in time. | 0:38:13 | 0:38:14 | |
He's in Marbella to support his
team-mates though and could be | 0:38:14 | 0:38:17 | |
drafted into play should his
injury situation improve. | 0:38:17 | 0:38:24 | |
I'm out here because I want to be
part of it. It's not like... Trying | 0:38:24 | 0:38:33 | |
to put Davis Cup second, I always
try to be ready when I can. But in | 0:38:33 | 0:38:38 | |
one way it was a good prong because
I made a deep run into the | 0:38:38 | 0:38:42 | |
Australian Open. So it was a quick
turnaround. They had done so well I | 0:38:42 | 0:38:46 | |
might have been ready for here. | 0:38:46 | 0:38:48 | |
So disappointment for Edmund,
but opportunity knocks | 0:38:48 | 0:38:51 | |
for Liam Broady and Cameron Norrie. | 0:38:51 | 0:38:52 | |
But who are they? | 0:38:52 | 0:38:53 | |
Well, Liam Broady, who you can see
in the pictures here getting ready | 0:38:53 | 0:38:57 | |
for today's match, probably
the biggest of his life, | 0:38:57 | 0:38:59 | |
is ranked 165 in
the world rankings. | 0:38:59 | 0:39:01 | |
Norrie is the world 114. | 0:39:01 | 0:39:03 | |
So both face really tough tasks. | 0:39:03 | 0:39:07 | |
Broady takes on the 21st-ranked
Albert Ramos-Vinolas. | 0:39:07 | 0:39:11 | |
There's no pressure on us and I'm
just going to focus solely on myself | 0:39:11 | 0:39:16 | |
and what I can bring to the court
and see if Albert can handle what I | 0:39:16 | 0:39:21 | |
have to offer. I think is going to
have to bring his a game and play | 0:39:21 | 0:39:25 | |
some pretty good tennis, because I'm
not going to be going anywhere. It's | 0:39:25 | 0:39:29 | |
a great opportunity for me to play
away in Spain on clay. I couldn't be | 0:39:29 | 0:39:33 | |
more thankful for the opportunity
and just want to show the world what | 0:39:33 | 0:39:38 | |
I can do. | 0:39:38 | 0:39:39 | |
Liam Broady will play
in the first singles rubber. | 0:39:39 | 0:39:41 | |
You can follow the action live
on the Red Button and online | 0:39:41 | 0:39:47 | |
from 9:45am this morning and there's
also coverage on BBC Two from 1pm. | 0:39:47 | 0:39:50 | |
And, finally, think
of elite Nigerian sport | 0:39:50 | 0:39:52 | |
and what comes to mind? | 0:39:52 | 0:39:54 | |
The Super Eagles national football
team with Premier League stars | 0:39:54 | 0:39:56 | |
Alex Iwobi, and Wilfred Ndidi. | 0:39:56 | 0:39:58 | |
Well, after next week,
that could all change at the Winter | 0:39:58 | 0:40:01 | |
Olympics. | 0:40:01 | 0:40:01 | |
The country will make history
by entering a female bobsleigh team | 0:40:01 | 0:40:04 | |
for the Games in South Korea. | 0:40:04 | 0:40:09 | |
They're the first Nigerian athletes
to qualify for the Winter Olympics, | 0:40:09 | 0:40:12 | |
and they've had to raise
their own money to get there. | 0:40:12 | 0:40:15 | |
All three bobsledders were once
track and field athletes, | 0:40:15 | 0:40:18 | |
before switching to winter sports. | 0:40:18 | 0:40:19 | |
That's why, because it's all about
the sprinting. | 0:40:19 | 0:40:23 | |
Anything can happen and we are here
to compete. We went through a lot of | 0:40:23 | 0:40:27 | |
things, a lot of trials, to get
here, so I think it's only right | 0:40:27 | 0:40:31 | |
that we give our best effort and
represent everyone, not just | 0:40:31 | 0:40:35 | |
Nigeria, but Africa as a continent
as well and everyone supporting us. | 0:40:35 | 0:40:39 | |
What a story that is. No snow in
Nigeria, but it's all about the | 0:40:39 | 0:40:45 | |
sprinting. That's why they have been
able to qualify. | 0:40:45 | 0:40:48 | |
An interesting story coming up.
There have been new numbers coming | 0:40:48 | 0:40:52 | |
out about prostate cancer, showing
more men are being diagnosed than | 0:40:52 | 0:40:56 | |
women with breast cancer and it's
all about whether or not people | 0:40:56 | 0:41:00 | |
test. Taps that's why we are seeing
the rise. -- perhaps. | 0:41:00 | 0:41:05 | |
I had checked last year. It was so
easy. Painless. Ten minutes. A place | 0:41:05 | 0:41:14 | |
near you to go. Fine. Luckily it was
OK. I will keep going back. | 0:41:14 | 0:41:21 | |
It's so important. It is a good
advertisement for people to know | 0:41:21 | 0:41:27 | |
it's not that difficult. | 0:41:27 | 0:41:28 | |
Every day, 129 men are diagnosed
with prostate cancer in the UK. | 0:41:28 | 0:41:32 | |
Now, for the first time,
the number of men dying | 0:41:32 | 0:41:34 | |
from the disease has overtaken
the number of women who die | 0:41:34 | 0:41:37 | |
from breast cancer every year. | 0:41:37 | 0:41:39 | |
Prostate Cancer UK is calling
for significant investment | 0:41:39 | 0:41:41 | |
into research, and the introduction
of a screening programme. | 0:41:41 | 0:41:43 | |
We're joined now in the studio
by GP Dr Fari Ahmad. | 0:41:43 | 0:41:47 | |
A very good morning to you. So,
these statistics tell a story. This | 0:41:47 | 0:41:53 | |
has overtaken breast cancer as the
biggest killer. What do you make of | 0:41:53 | 0:41:58 | |
it? It feels like it has crept up on
us. I think part of it is the | 0:41:58 | 0:42:03 | |
disease itself. The slow-growing
disease that attempts to affect men | 0:42:03 | 0:42:11 | |
over 45. We have focused a lot on
breast cancer and on women and it's | 0:42:11 | 0:42:15 | |
almost been not looked at as much. I
think some of that is because men | 0:42:15 | 0:42:20 | |
tend to be active and involved in
their health and they don't go to | 0:42:20 | 0:42:25 | |
the GB as often. They don't engage
with things as much as women. So | 0:42:25 | 0:42:29 | |
there is some of that going on as
well. But I'm not that surprised | 0:42:29 | 0:42:33 | |
that it is creeping up. We are
living longer, so the longer you | 0:42:33 | 0:42:37 | |
live the more chances of developing
this. Mike used the word painless, | 0:42:37 | 0:42:42 | |
it was ten minutes. There's a lot of
reluctance. It does involve a rectal | 0:42:42 | 0:42:49 | |
exam, which is not something many
people would relish. They could fill | 0:42:49 | 0:42:53 | |
in -- feel embarrassed, be worried
about the discomfort. How easy is it | 0:42:53 | 0:42:59 | |
now for men to potentially approach
a GP? It's not what men of a certain | 0:42:59 | 0:43:04 | |
age do. I do understand their
reluctance, but it's our job. Some | 0:43:04 | 0:43:09 | |
people might find it an awkward
thing to talk to the doctor about, | 0:43:09 | 0:43:13 | |
but we are used to having these
awkward conversations. Not everyone | 0:43:13 | 0:43:16 | |
will need a rectal examination, but
sometimes if we catch it early | 0:43:16 | 0:43:20 | |
that's great. What about the
science? I was just going to ask | 0:43:20 | 0:43:27 | |
about the indicators. They aren't
specifically for prostate cancer. | 0:43:27 | 0:43:30 | |
They tend to be symptoms with
passing you are in, so people can | 0:43:30 | 0:43:35 | |
struggle to go, feel like they
aren't going completely. They get | 0:43:35 | 0:43:38 | |
out more. They are suddenly having
to go... Sometimes people get light | 0:43:38 | 0:43:45 | |
in the euro and all infections. Then
there are more symptoms as the | 0:43:45 | 0:43:50 | |
disease spreads. But often those
symptoms can just be about getting | 0:43:50 | 0:43:55 | |
older and you prostate getting
bigger. But it is important to go | 0:43:55 | 0:43:59 | |
and speak to your GP if you have
these symptoms and it is usually a | 0:43:59 | 0:44:04 | |
discussion, they will find out more
about you and what the symptoms. You | 0:44:04 | 0:44:07 | |
might need a blood test, an
examination sometimes. What are the | 0:44:07 | 0:44:13 | |
screaming -- screaming parameters?
Women are told that a certain age | 0:44:13 | 0:44:20 | |
you have breast cancer screenings.
Does the same apply for men? Widowed | 0:44:20 | 0:44:24 | |
have an official prostate screening.
Should there be, in your opinion? To | 0:44:24 | 0:44:29 | |
prompt people? There a lots of
issues and lots of debate about | 0:44:29 | 0:44:33 | |
this. The PSA, a blood test that
shows you prostate levels, has been | 0:44:33 | 0:44:39 | |
around for a while and initially
there was some thought that that | 0:44:39 | 0:44:43 | |
would be a good screening tool. But
it's not been that obvious that it | 0:44:43 | 0:44:47 | |
has helped save lives, so a lot of
stuff still needs to happen. At the | 0:44:47 | 0:44:52 | |
moment the best way to diagnose it
is talk to your doctor, get a blood | 0:44:52 | 0:44:56 | |
test and you might need to have an
examination. But they are not | 0:44:56 | 0:44:59 | |
painful. They are easy. Thank you
very much for your time this | 0:44:59 | 0:45:03 | |
morning. We will be talking about it
later as well this morning, just | 0:45:03 | 0:45:08 | |
after 8am up with an expert as
someone who has been through the | 0:45:08 | 0:45:12 | |
process. | 0:45:12 | 0:45:14 | |
It's 6:45 and you're watching
Breakfast from BBC News. | 0:45:14 | 0:45:18 | |
Carol is very grateful to be inside
the studio, you were in a mild | 0:45:18 | 0:45:24 | |
breeze I understand. A mild breeze! | 0:45:24 | 0:45:27 | |
the studio, you were in a mild
breeze I understand. A mild breeze! | 0:45:27 | 0:45:27 | |
It was freezing, not just in London,
either. Good morning. This morning | 0:45:27 | 0:45:32 | |
will be pretty chilly, some frost
around first thing in the West | 0:45:32 | 0:45:36 | |
Midlands and the West Country but
that is it. For many of us, some | 0:45:36 | 0:45:39 | |
showers. More especially in the
north and east, coming in across | 0:45:39 | 0:45:45 | |
parts of Scotland and Ireland, parts
of Wales and south-west England. As | 0:45:45 | 0:45:49 | |
we go through the morning to showers
persisting eastern parts of England, | 0:45:49 | 0:45:52 | |
move to the west, it is cold but we
have brighter skies. Showers will be | 0:45:52 | 0:45:57 | |
heavy and they will also have
perhaps a bit of sleet and hail in | 0:45:57 | 0:46:01 | |
them as we go through the day. The
southern counties, dry weather, Niki | 0:46:01 | 0:46:05 | |
if you are stepping out, and then we
running the show was in the | 0:46:05 | 0:46:09 | |
south-west, especially across Devon
and Cornwall. Wales, some showers | 0:46:09 | 0:46:13 | |
today but for many we will start off
on a dry note. While the island, a | 0:46:13 | 0:46:18 | |
few showers dotted around. The
chilly start. Some fun trying | 0:46:18 | 0:46:21 | |
though. Western showers -- western
Scotland a few showers. In the north | 0:46:21 | 0:46:27 | |
and the north-east, a lot of dry
weather. As a go through the day, | 0:46:27 | 0:46:33 | |
many of the showers will fade, some
will become fewer and further | 0:46:33 | 0:46:36 | |
between in the East with less of a
wind, but it will feel more pleasant | 0:46:36 | 0:46:40 | |
than yesterday in the sunshine but
the wind will strengthen through the | 0:46:40 | 0:46:44 | |
day across parts of the south.
Temperatures, five in the north, | 0:46:44 | 0:46:48 | |
seven or eight in the south. Then we
have a band of rain, some cloud | 0:46:48 | 0:46:52 | |
ahead of it, as it comes our way, it
is a weather front and is to go | 0:46:52 | 0:46:57 | |
through the evening and overnight it
will bring rain across northern | 0:46:57 | 0:47:00 | |
Ireland with some hill snow, the
same commendation across Scotland | 0:47:00 | 0:47:03 | |
but the snow here will fall to more
modest levels, 250 metres, some hill | 0:47:03 | 0:47:08 | |
snow across northern England and
also in across parts of Wales, | 0:47:08 | 0:47:12 | |
mostly in the hills. The heaviest
rain will be in the south-west as a | 0:47:12 | 0:47:16 | |
dance towards the Midlands, we will
see some sleep before the end of the | 0:47:16 | 0:47:20 | |
night. This is the weather front
responsible. Through Saturday it | 0:47:20 | 0:47:24 | |
will be moving eastward into being
during the day it flips around and | 0:47:24 | 0:47:28 | |
it starts to move back towards the
west. The scenario the Saturday is a | 0:47:28 | 0:47:33 | |
cold start to the day, the risk of
ice on services that are untreated, | 0:47:33 | 0:47:37 | |
the mix of rain, sleet and snow,
mostly killed in, moving from the | 0:47:37 | 0:47:41 | |
west towards the East and it will
brighten the showers ahead of it and | 0:47:41 | 0:47:45 | |
it will drag back towards the
western feel cold. Topping on cold, | 0:47:45 | 0:47:51 | |
Sunday will be cold, a change of MS
and a stiff easterly wind, the cold | 0:47:51 | 0:47:56 | |
direction for us, coming in from the
North Sea, dragging in some cloud | 0:47:56 | 0:47:59 | |
and also wintry showers in parts of
the south, they are showers, but a | 0:47:59 | 0:48:03 | |
lot of us will see them, the
brighter skies will be in the | 0:48:03 | 0:48:07 | |
north-west. Good to see, Carol,
thank you. We will talk to Ben now. | 0:48:07 | 0:48:12 | |
A bit of a milestone now which is a
company, Apple, that have made more | 0:48:12 | 0:48:17 | |
money than any company that has ever
made over three months before. It is | 0:48:17 | 0:48:24 | |
easy to throw these figures around,
£14 billion is how much apple made | 0:48:24 | 0:48:27 | |
over the last three months. Really,
really impressive figures but then | 0:48:27 | 0:48:33 | |
there are all sorts of questions
about whether we have hit the top of | 0:48:33 | 0:48:37 | |
the market because we know the sales
of the iPhone 's slowdown, and | 0:48:37 | 0:48:40 | |
launched a very expensive one, so it
is fantastic to see these sorts of | 0:48:40 | 0:48:44 | |
figures but there are still some
concerns about how much power the | 0:48:44 | 0:48:48 | |
big organisations have, like these
ones, Apple last night reported its | 0:48:48 | 0:48:52 | |
biggest quarterly profit of all
time, despite a fall in how many | 0:48:52 | 0:48:56 | |
phones actually sold, and remember
it is just over the year. It really | 0:48:56 | 0:49:02 | |
does go to show how big of a part
these big technology firms have | 0:49:02 | 0:49:07 | |
become. This Year 1 of these firms
will become the world's biggest | 0:49:07 | 0:49:11 | |
trillion dollar company, yes,
trillion dollar, and that is because | 0:49:11 | 0:49:14 | |
they may be a big part of our lives
already but they want to be a bigger | 0:49:14 | 0:49:19 | |
part, everything from what we buy to
what we want, how we stay in touch, | 0:49:19 | 0:49:23 | |
how we get around and frankly
everything in between. Their next | 0:49:23 | 0:49:26 | |
plans involve robots that we can
speak to, self driving cars and | 0:49:26 | 0:49:30 | |
shops that know what we want before
we even know we want it. Don't have | 0:49:30 | 0:49:34 | |
to click on a mouse. Let's talk
about all of this. | 0:49:34 | 0:49:44 | |
Let's talk to Matti Littunen
from Enders Analysis | 0:49:44 | 0:49:48 | |
Where's the come from? People will
worry whether Apple will be able to | 0:49:48 | 0:49:54 | |
spend most -- sell enough of the
most expensive phone so yes, | 0:49:54 | 0:49:58 | |
obviously they have, they have
increased the price of $100 to £560 | 0:49:58 | 0:50:03 | |
which is impressive and it really
how Apple | 0:50:03 | 0:50:05 | |
which is impressive and it really
how Apple is the competitive company | 0:50:05 | 0:50:08 | |
and able to capitalise on their
role. A huge amount of money, hard | 0:50:08 | 0:50:15 | |
to imagine £14 billion in three
months. We sort the future point | 0:50:15 | 0:50:20 | |
though where those sales are now
starting to fall, does that suggest | 0:50:20 | 0:50:23 | |
we have got the saturation, everyone
has an iPhone, who wants one already | 0:50:23 | 0:50:28 | |
has one? Apple now has 1.3 billion
devices in use so now the question | 0:50:28 | 0:50:35 | |
is how are they going to be able to
serve these customers better and | 0:50:35 | 0:50:39 | |
better and increase the already
skyhigh revenue they are getting | 0:50:39 | 0:50:45 | |
from each of them every few years or
so? Let's talk about Amazon because | 0:50:45 | 0:50:50 | |
it is easy to get caught up in the
Apple thing but their figures were | 0:50:50 | 0:50:53 | |
also impressive. They are
interesting, because rather than | 0:50:53 | 0:50:57 | |
sitting on a big pile of cash, they
know exactly what to do with all of | 0:50:57 | 0:51:02 | |
it so straightaway they invested
into new growth areas, moving into | 0:51:02 | 0:51:07 | |
races, retailers, whole foods, areas
like healthcare, they just announced | 0:51:07 | 0:51:12 | |
a partnership, so across all areas
of consumer's life, Amazon is there | 0:51:12 | 0:51:16 | |
or trying to get there. Is there a
danger these firms are too big race | 0:51:16 | 0:51:20 | |
to mark a lot of these have appeared
practically overnight and have got | 0:51:20 | 0:51:25 | |
the valuations which have taken
centuries to build for a traditional | 0:51:25 | 0:51:28 | |
firm. Our people worried they have
too much control over all lights? | 0:51:28 | 0:51:33 | |
Absolutely. One of the things to
watch with these companies is | 0:51:33 | 0:51:35 | |
political attention that they are
getting with the scale of success on | 0:51:35 | 0:51:39 | |
them, first in the EU with
increasing in the US. You have | 0:51:39 | 0:51:44 | |
concerned citizens and their
competitors in all sorts of areas | 0:51:44 | 0:51:47 | |
who are going to politicians and
asking of these companies too big Mr | 0:51:47 | 0:51:50 | |
Mark of the affecting us too much?
Do they have enough power? | 0:51:50 | 0:51:55 | |
Politicians have a hard job of
figuring out what they need to be a | 0:51:55 | 0:51:59 | |
economy, what they mean to the
future, what should we as a society | 0:51:59 | 0:52:02 | |
hope their role to be? These are the
sorts of questions coming up. Three | 0:52:02 | 0:52:06 | |
things to look out for this year if
we talk about these firms, what of | 0:52:06 | 0:52:10 | |
the next big things have planned?
Politics is one thing, other areas, | 0:52:10 | 0:52:15 | |
interesting new devices and
services, so what is going to happen | 0:52:15 | 0:52:19 | |
with augmented reality for example,
what is the next big consumer | 0:52:19 | 0:52:23 | |
technology thing after smart phones,
artificial intelligence is the third | 0:52:23 | 0:52:27 | |
one, I would say, in our everyday
lives, so often we use these | 0:52:27 | 0:52:31 | |
services companies and we don't
understand they are part of the four | 0:52:31 | 0:52:37 | |
power would buy artificial
intelligence already so they know | 0:52:37 | 0:52:40 | |
what we want before we want it, we
use Google Maps, each knows what to | 0:52:40 | 0:52:44 | |
recommend based on where we are
before we have even searched for | 0:52:44 | 0:52:47 | |
anything. If we use Amazon, they
recommend better and better | 0:52:47 | 0:52:50 | |
recommended products and things like
that so the question is which one of | 0:52:50 | 0:52:56 | |
these companies is the best
observing us as consumers better | 0:52:56 | 0:53:00 | |
with this technology? Good to talk
to you. Thank you Farouq 's plane in | 0:53:00 | 0:53:05 | |
Mt. More from me after seven AM. | 0:53:05 | 0:53:11 | |
In the UK, for every
two statues of women, | 0:53:11 | 0:53:14 | |
there are five for men. | 0:53:14 | 0:53:15 | |
This may be about to change,
starting with three inspirational | 0:53:15 | 0:53:18 | |
women who spearheaded
the suffragette movement. | 0:53:18 | 0:53:19 | |
Breakfast's Jayne McCubbin has
been to find out more. | 0:53:19 | 0:53:27 | |
Soon to be immortalised, three women
who fought for all women to rise up | 0:53:29 | 0:53:33 | |
and claimed their vote. Perhaps the
most famous among them, Emmeline | 0:53:33 | 0:53:37 | |
Pankhurst. I wanted Emily to be the
courageous, dignified, determined | 0:53:37 | 0:53:44 | |
activist. The fight began right here
in Manchester. This very room. Here | 0:53:44 | 0:53:52 | |
the suffragette movement was born
and here, in December, she will | 0:53:52 | 0:53:55 | |
return. Suffragettes were on the
streets, ringing bells, summoning | 0:53:55 | 0:54:01 | |
people out of their homes, somebody
grabbed a kitchen chair as a | 0:54:01 | 0:54:05 | |
makeshift rostrum and Emmeline
Pankhurst climbed the top. Enough is | 0:54:05 | 0:54:14 | |
enough, you know, time for deeds,
not words. This was the message that | 0:54:14 | 0:54:20 | |
inspired women up and down the
country, ordinary women like Alice | 0:54:20 | 0:54:24 | |
Hawkins in Leicester, a mother of
six who worked in a shoe factory. | 0:54:24 | 0:54:27 | |
That is what drove Alice Fulwood,
she wanted equal pay and the vote | 0:54:27 | 0:54:32 | |
was the route to getting that.
Everyone that went off one of these? | 0:54:32 | 0:54:37 | |
Five times her great-grandmother was
jailed. They still have her hunger | 0:54:37 | 0:54:41 | |
strike medal, her prison badge, the
sash she wore on every protest. | 0:54:41 | 0:54:46 | |
Never before spending days baking in
the kitchen, making sure her family | 0:54:46 | 0:54:50 | |
would be fed if she were arrested.
If they were going to protest that | 0:54:50 | 0:54:54 | |
was a chance to be arrested, not
only be arrested but imprisoned, and | 0:54:54 | 0:54:59 | |
so they anticipated that by making
sure the home could manage without | 0:54:59 | 0:55:03 | |
them. That is amazing, isn't it?
That is what she did. At women | 0:55:03 | 0:55:07 | |
great? We sure our! So practical!
Alice knew her duty to women and | 0:55:07 | 0:55:16 | |
family and on Sunday, Leicester will
pay their respects as a statue is | 0:55:16 | 0:55:20 | |
finally unveiled. She was one of
many women who risked everything to | 0:55:20 | 0:55:24 | |
fight for the right to shape what
happened here are but 100 years on, | 0:55:24 | 0:55:30 | |
women are still underrepresented,
not just in Parliament but in | 0:55:30 | 0:55:33 | |
Parliament Square. All the statues
here are a man. Where are the women? | 0:55:33 | 0:55:39 | |
I couldn't believe it. The campaign
by Caroline will finally pay off | 0:55:39 | 0:55:43 | |
next year when a statue will honour
Tillerson faucets, the woman who set | 0:55:43 | 0:55:47 | |
up the National union of women
Suffrage societies. It has been 100 | 0:55:47 | 0:55:51 | |
years on the sixth of February since
the first women won the right to | 0:55:51 | 0:55:57 | |
vote and it is shocking, really,
that it has taken 100 years for us | 0:55:57 | 0:56:01 | |
to get a statue of one of the women
who fought so hard for the right | 0:56:01 | 0:56:06 | |
here in Parliament Square and I'm
delighted that Fawcett will be the | 0:56:06 | 0:56:09 | |
first to join the rank of these
Auguste man and I hope she will be | 0:56:09 | 0:56:13 | |
the first of many. This is what they
fought for, Millicent died a few | 0:56:13 | 0:56:17 | |
days after the vote was extended to
all women, Anna-Lena never lived to | 0:56:17 | 0:56:21 | |
see the day, all is voted in eight
general elections. Hopefully seeing | 0:56:21 | 0:56:26 | |
that statue it will encourage young
people exercise their right to vote. | 0:56:26 | 0:56:30 | |
I really do feel that. An incredible
legacy which lives on. It really | 0:56:30 | 0:56:39 | |
makes you think, doesn't it? | 0:56:39 | 1:00:07 | |
Hello, this is Breakfast,
with Charlie Stayt and Naga | 1:00:10 | 1:00:12 | |
Munchetty. | 1:00:12 | 1:00:13 | |
The number of men dying
from prostate cancer overtakes | 1:00:13 | 1:00:15 | |
the number of women killed by breast
cancer for the first time. | 1:00:15 | 1:00:18 | |
It's now the third biggest
cancer killer in the UK. | 1:00:18 | 1:00:21 | |
Charities are calling for more
screening and research | 1:00:21 | 1:00:23 | |
into the disease. | 1:00:23 | 1:00:26 | |
Good morning. | 1:00:36 | 1:00:36 | |
It's Friday, the 2nd of February. | 1:00:36 | 1:00:38 | |
Also this morning: | 1:00:38 | 1:00:40 | |
The Prime Minister says her trip
to China is a sign of a "global | 1:00:40 | 1:00:44 | |
Britain" and insists
that she is delivering what people | 1:00:44 | 1:00:46 | |
want on Brexit. | 1:00:46 | 1:00:51 | |
Do you want to be the Tory leader at
the next general election? I've been | 1:00:51 | 1:00:56 | |
asked this question on a number of
occasions. I said clearly throughout | 1:00:56 | 1:01:01 | |
my political career I served my
country and my party. | 1:01:01 | 1:01:04 | |
I'm not a quitter. | 1:01:04 | 1:01:06 | |
An investigation into the mystery
death of Hollywood star Natalie Wood | 1:01:06 | 1:01:09 | |
more than 30 years ago
says her husband Robert Wagner | 1:01:09 | 1:01:12 | |
is being treated as a
"person of interest". | 1:01:12 | 1:01:16 | |
Tech giant Apple reports the biggest
ever company profit of £14 billion | 1:01:16 | 1:01:19 | |
for the last three months. | 1:01:19 | 1:01:25 | |
But sales of its iPhone
are falling, after launching | 1:01:25 | 1:01:27 | |
an expensive new handset. | 1:01:27 | 1:01:28 | |
I'll have the details. | 1:01:28 | 1:01:29 | |
In sport, a painful blow
for England's women. | 1:01:29 | 1:01:31 | |
Goalkeeper Karen Bardlsey
is stretchered off after a nasty | 1:01:31 | 1:01:34 | |
fall onto her shoulder
in only the second minute | 1:01:34 | 1:01:36 | |
of the Super League match. | 1:01:36 | 1:01:42 | |
It means she could miss crucial
World Cup qualifiers. | 1:01:42 | 1:01:46 | |
Good morning from the home of
worldwide scouting and this | 1:01:46 | 1:01:51 | |
magnificent tree, at least 500 years
old. It is written macro's entry in | 1:01:51 | 1:01:57 | |
the European tree award.
Thank you. More of that later. -- | 1:01:57 | 1:02:02 | |
Britain's entry. Today many of us
will have a dry day, with lengthy | 1:02:02 | 1:02:08 | |
sunny spells, but Shah down east and
west coasts and part of the north | 1:02:08 | 1:02:12 | |
will become lighter through the
morning. -- showers. Wherever you | 1:02:12 | 1:02:18 | |
are it will feel chilly and be
called over the next few days, even | 1:02:18 | 1:02:21 | |
in the next week. | 1:02:21 | 1:02:23 | |
Good morning. | 1:02:23 | 1:02:23 | |
First, our main story. | 1:02:23 | 1:02:24 | |
The number of men dying in the UK
from prostate cancer has overtaken | 1:02:24 | 1:02:28 | |
the number of women killed by breast
cancer for the first time. | 1:02:28 | 1:02:31 | |
The charity Prostate Cancer UK says
advances in diagnosis | 1:02:31 | 1:02:34 | |
and treatment of breast
cancer have paid off | 1:02:34 | 1:02:37 | |
and similar benefits could be seen
if more money was allocated | 1:02:37 | 1:02:40 | |
to the fight against
prostate cancer. | 1:02:40 | 1:02:42 | |
Here's our health
correspondent Dominic Hughes. | 1:02:42 | 1:02:44 | |
Prostate cancer does
not discriminate. | 1:02:44 | 1:02:48 | |
Last year, keen runner Tony Callier
discovered he had the disease | 1:02:48 | 1:02:51 | |
while training
for an ultramarathon. | 1:02:51 | 1:02:55 | |
His diagnosis was late and he knows
cancer will eventually | 1:02:55 | 1:02:59 | |
take his life, so Tony
is using the time he has left | 1:02:59 | 1:03:02 | |
to warn other men about the dangers. | 1:03:02 | 1:03:04 | |
I think it's really important
that people are aware | 1:03:04 | 1:03:07 | |
of what the symptoms
are and I would actually urge men | 1:03:07 | 1:03:10 | |
to talk to their doctors, | 1:03:10 | 1:03:11 | |
if they have any
urinary issues at all. | 1:03:11 | 1:03:14 | |
My issue is that I didn't
actually have any symptoms | 1:03:14 | 1:03:19 | |
and they think I'd had the cancer
for ten years beforehand. | 1:03:19 | 1:03:22 | |
More men are living to an age
where they have a greater chance | 1:03:22 | 1:03:26 | |
of developing prostate cancer. | 1:03:26 | 1:03:27 | |
So, in 2015, more than 11,800 men
died of the disease, | 1:03:27 | 1:03:30 | |
compared with just over 11,400
deaths in 2015 due to breast cancer. | 1:03:30 | 1:03:37 | |
And while the proportion of people
dying from prostate cancer, | 1:03:37 | 1:03:40 | |
the mortality rate,
has fallen in the past decade, | 1:03:40 | 1:03:42 | |
down by 6%, the decline in deaths
from breast cancer has been | 1:03:42 | 1:03:46 | |
even greater, at more than 10%. | 1:03:46 | 1:03:53 | |
It really is time to get behind this
and to realise that we need to get | 1:03:53 | 1:03:58 | |
on top of it now because it's just
going to become more common, | 1:03:58 | 1:04:05 | |
and it's going to kill more
men if we are not able | 1:04:05 | 1:04:08 | |
to do that. | 1:04:08 | 1:04:09 | |
Tony has joined those calling for
increased funding for research | 1:04:09 | 1:04:12 | |
and the development of a reliable
prostate screening programme, | 1:04:12 | 1:04:14 | |
so the gains seen in the fight
against breast cancer can be matched | 1:04:14 | 1:04:18 | |
in the fight against
the disease that he knows | 1:04:18 | 1:04:20 | |
will eventually claim his life, too. | 1:04:20 | 1:04:22 | |
Health leaders have written
to the Justice Secretary, | 1:04:22 | 1:04:24 | |
urging him to reform the pay-out
system for negligence claims | 1:04:24 | 1:04:27 | |
against the NHS. | 1:04:27 | 1:04:28 | |
They say the NHS would have to pay
up to £65 billion before current | 1:04:28 | 1:04:32 | |
claims were successful. | 1:04:32 | 1:04:35 | |
The government is looking
at measures to control costs | 1:04:35 | 1:04:37 | |
in these cases. | 1:04:37 | 1:04:40 | |
Theresa May insists she's delivering
what British people want on Brexit, | 1:04:40 | 1:04:43 | |
and setting out a clear vision
to the rest of the world. | 1:04:43 | 1:04:46 | |
Downing Street says billions
of pounds' worth of deals have been | 1:04:46 | 1:04:49 | |
signed during her three-day visit
to China, which ends later. | 1:04:49 | 1:04:52 | |
Earlier, the Prime Minister
spoke to the BBC. | 1:04:52 | 1:05:00 | |
We are just at the beginning of the
process of negotiating with the | 1:05:03 | 1:05:07 | |
European Union, so we will be out
there enjoying the deal we get is | 1:05:07 | 1:05:11 | |
delivering on what the British
people want. That's what this is | 1:05:11 | 1:05:13 | |
about and I know what the British
people want as well is good jobs for | 1:05:13 | 1:05:18 | |
themselves and their children and
that's why it is important for me to | 1:05:18 | 1:05:21 | |
be here in China, where businesses
have been selling deals, selling | 1:05:21 | 1:05:25 | |
more UK products, bringing more into
China and ensuring there are more | 1:05:25 | 1:05:28 | |
jobs for people in the UK. Do you
want to be the Tory leader at the | 1:05:28 | 1:05:33 | |
next general election? I've been
asked this question on a number of | 1:05:33 | 1:05:37 | |
occasions. I've said clearly
throughout my political career had | 1:05:37 | 1:05:40 | |
served my country and party. I'm not
a quitter. I mean this because there | 1:05:40 | 1:05:45 | |
is a job that needs to be done here. | 1:05:45 | 1:05:48 | |
Our political correspondent
Iain Watson joins us from | 1:05:48 | 1:05:50 | |
Westminster. | 1:05:50 | 1:05:50 | |
You've been listening to that
interview and she is not a quitter, | 1:05:50 | 1:05:53 | |
with her that before, but she is
very much making clear she is here | 1:05:53 | 1:05:58 | |
to stay and fighting back against
critics, isn't she? She is fighting | 1:05:58 | 1:06:02 | |
back against critics. She is saying,
here is an image of global Britain | 1:06:02 | 1:06:08 | |
she is portraying in China, a
confident Britain as they get ready | 1:06:08 | 1:06:12 | |
to leave the EU. Billions of pounds
of trade deals. But I'm not sure | 1:06:12 | 1:06:16 | |
that's enough to silence critics.
She was asked off -- about whether | 1:06:16 | 1:06:24 | |
she would try for the next election.
I will be talking to not just | 1:06:24 | 1:06:34 | |
Conservative MPs but council
candidates, some business people, | 1:06:34 | 1:06:37 | |
and there is still a great deal of
scepticism about the leadership. | 1:06:37 | 1:06:41 | |
Some people say she doesn't deliver
in council elections then there will | 1:06:41 | 1:06:47 | |
be renewed pressure for her to go.
Downing Street believed that a lot | 1:06:47 | 1:06:51 | |
of speculation about the future will
simply disappear as she gets onto | 1:06:51 | 1:06:55 | |
the front foot of trade talks with
the EU, but she was asked about | 1:06:55 | 1:06:58 | |
those trade talks by Laura
Kuenssberg, did she want to be | 1:06:58 | 1:07:03 | |
closer to the EU, and she again
sidestep that and said she wanted | 1:07:03 | 1:07:11 | |
tariff free trade deals. But if she
does give details she will end up | 1:07:11 | 1:07:15 | |
risking eliminating some people from
foreign party. We will watch that | 1:07:15 | 1:07:20 | |
tightrope she is walking very
closely. Thank you. | 1:07:20 | 1:07:23 | |
And we'll hear more from that
interview with Theresa May later | 1:07:23 | 1:07:26 | |
on in the programme. | 1:07:26 | 1:07:27 | |
Police investigating the death
of Natalie Wood more than three | 1:07:27 | 1:07:29 | |
decades ago say her husband
Robert Wagner is now being treated | 1:07:29 | 1:07:32 | |
as a person of interest. | 1:07:32 | 1:07:37 | |
The actress was found dead after
going missing from a yacht off the | 1:07:37 | 1:07:40 | |
coast of California. | 1:07:40 | 1:07:41 | |
Our Los Angeles correspondent
James Cook has more details. | 1:07:41 | 1:07:44 | |
Natalie Wood was a Hollywood
superstar with three Oscar | 1:07:44 | 1:07:47 | |
nominations when she died suddenly
in 1981 at the age of just 43. | 1:07:47 | 1:07:52 | |
Her body was found
floating in the water | 1:07:52 | 1:07:55 | |
off the coast of California. | 1:07:55 | 1:08:00 | |
Near the yacht on which
she was sailing with | 1:08:00 | 1:08:07 | |
her husband Robert Wagner,
co-star Christopher Walkin | 1:08:07 | 1:08:08 | |
and the boat's captain. | 1:08:08 | 1:08:09 | |
Initially the death was ruled
an accident, but the enquiry | 1:08:09 | 1:08:12 | |
was reopened in 2011. | 1:08:12 | 1:08:13 | |
Police now say that two
new witnesses have corroborated | 1:08:13 | 1:08:16 | |
accounts of a fight
between Mr Wagner and Ms Wood | 1:08:16 | 1:08:18 | |
on the night she disappeared. | 1:08:18 | 1:08:24 | |
Detectives say it appears
she was the victim of an assault | 1:08:24 | 1:08:27 | |
and they believe her husband
was the last person | 1:08:27 | 1:08:29 | |
to see her alive. | 1:08:29 | 1:08:30 | |
Police say Robert Wagner has
refused to speak to them | 1:08:30 | 1:08:33 | |
since the case was reopened. | 1:08:33 | 1:08:34 | |
They've not declared the death
a murder and no charges have been | 1:08:34 | 1:08:38 | |
filed against the actor. | 1:08:38 | 1:08:39 | |
He is now 87-years-old
and has not commented | 1:08:39 | 1:08:41 | |
on the latest developments. | 1:08:41 | 1:08:49 | |
The eldest son of the late Cuban
leader Fidel Castro has died | 1:08:51 | 1:08:55 | |
in Havana aged 68. | 1:08:55 | 1:08:56 | |
Cuba's state media reported that
Fidel Castro Diaz-Balart, | 1:08:56 | 1:08:58 | |
widely known as Fidelito,
took his own life after a long | 1:08:58 | 1:09:01 | |
battle with depression. | 1:09:01 | 1:09:02 | |
He was a nuclear physicist
and worked for Cuba's communist | 1:09:02 | 1:09:04 | |
government. | 1:09:04 | 1:09:05 | |
Health experts are calling
on the government to fully fund IVF | 1:09:05 | 1:09:08 | |
treatment to help cut the number
of multiple pregnancies, | 1:09:08 | 1:09:10 | |
that are riskier for
mothers and babies. | 1:09:10 | 1:09:14 | |
The Royal College of Obstetricians
and Gynaecologists says the health | 1:09:14 | 1:09:17 | |
and financial burden these
pregnancies pose on the NHS | 1:09:17 | 1:09:19 | |
can't be overstated. | 1:09:19 | 1:09:27 | |
As we reported earlier in the week,
France has experienced the heaviest | 1:09:27 | 1:09:32 | |
rainfall in 50 years,
leading to flooding in central Paris | 1:09:32 | 1:09:36 | |
and, although waters levels
peaked on Monday, some suburbs | 1:09:36 | 1:09:39 | |
are still underwater. | 1:09:39 | 1:09:39 | |
While the floods have
caused misery for some, | 1:09:39 | 1:09:42 | |
with dozens evacuated
from their homes, | 1:09:42 | 1:09:44 | |
but these wakeboarders took
the opportunity to practise just | 1:09:44 | 1:09:49 | |
outside their houses. | 1:09:49 | 1:09:54 | |
This is one of the suburbs. | 1:09:54 | 1:09:58 | |
It was six metres at its heighest. | 1:09:58 | 1:10:03 | |
That's how you make the best out of
a bad situation! Mike will be here | 1:10:03 | 1:10:11 | |
with the sport later and of course
Carol will have the weather | 1:10:11 | 1:10:14 | |
forecast. | 1:10:14 | 1:10:15 | |
Children are spending more time
online than ever before, | 1:10:15 | 1:10:17 | |
but, according to the NSPCC,
the Government still hasn't | 1:10:17 | 1:10:19 | |
implemented half of
the recommendations for safeguarding | 1:10:19 | 1:10:21 | |
them that were made a decade ago. | 1:10:21 | 1:10:23 | |
The government says
it is working with industry, | 1:10:23 | 1:10:25 | |
schools and parents to make sure
there are robust protections | 1:10:25 | 1:10:28 | |
in place, but the charity is calling
for a code of practice | 1:10:28 | 1:10:31 | |
to protect young people. | 1:10:31 | 1:10:33 | |
We spoke to one family about how
they stay safe online. | 1:10:33 | 1:10:39 | |
Online safety is a concern. I think
it's a concern for parents, yes. You | 1:10:39 | 1:10:44 | |
put something on and it disappears
in a minute, is that right? Yeah. | 1:10:44 | 1:10:47 | |
Ten seconds. You put it on your
story and that takes a day to go? We | 1:10:47 | 1:10:55 | |
make sure we know to pass codes to
be able to get on the devices and we | 1:10:55 | 1:10:59 | |
just have a look through and that
what each of them are doing to make | 1:10:59 | 1:11:03 | |
sure they haven't got any apps on
there that they shouldn't have. We | 1:11:03 | 1:11:12 | |
do have some parental locks that
lock something is automatically. I | 1:11:12 | 1:11:15 | |
feel safe using social media. I have
a private accounts are no stranger | 1:11:15 | 1:11:20 | |
can look at what I'm doing and I
know the rules, not to share | 1:11:20 | 1:11:24 | |
passwords, where a live, at school.
They are private accounts, so they | 1:11:24 | 1:11:30 | |
have to follow that person and the
person has to follow them. In terms | 1:11:30 | 1:11:36 | |
of a voluntary code, I think it
would be better if we were to put | 1:11:36 | 1:11:40 | |
something more permanent in law
because I think you can't actually | 1:11:40 | 1:11:43 | |
do enough for children's safety and
for everyone's safety, so, yes, | 1:11:43 | 1:11:47 | |
those things will be good. I
understand why companies may not | 1:11:47 | 1:11:50 | |
wish to have that, at a thinker
would be good. | 1:11:50 | 1:11:56 | |
Tanya Byron who made the original
reccomendations in that report ten | 1:11:56 | 1:11:59 | |
years ago joins us now from London. | 1:11:59 | 1:12:01 | |
Thank you for your time this
morning. I'm just trying to get a | 1:12:01 | 1:12:04 | |
sense of scale over your criticism
of the government at this point in | 1:12:04 | 1:12:08 | |
time. Because many people have said
the government isn't doing enough. | 1:12:08 | 1:12:12 | |
We've heard that before. How great
you see the problem? The problem is | 1:12:12 | 1:12:17 | |
huge. I did my report in 2008, four
children in the digital world, and I | 1:12:17 | 1:12:23 | |
recommended there should be a
voluntary code of practice so that | 1:12:23 | 1:12:28 | |
social media companies could self
regulate, but they needed to work | 1:12:28 | 1:12:33 | |
together. UK Council for Child
Internet Safety was set up following | 1:12:33 | 1:12:36 | |
my recommendation so they could work
together. Ten years later this | 1:12:36 | 1:12:39 | |
hasn't happened and government now
is saying, let's see if we can get a | 1:12:39 | 1:12:43 | |
voluntary code of practice. It is
now too late. We lost over -- got | 1:12:43 | 1:12:50 | |
over 500 reports of sexual offences
against children. That's 15 day in | 1:12:50 | 1:12:55 | |
2016 and 17 and last year when
finally the law came in, the anti- | 1:12:55 | 1:13:01 | |
grooming law, in six months we have
1300 offences against children. So | 1:13:01 | 1:13:05 | |
it is enough now. The social media
companies have been left to mark | 1:13:05 | 1:13:11 | |
their own home work, they haven't
done it. My recommendation was ten | 1:13:11 | 1:13:14 | |
years ago, it hasn't been done. It's
not good enough now to give them | 1:13:14 | 1:13:18 | |
another ten years to see if they can
get a voluntary code of practice up | 1:13:18 | 1:13:23 | |
and running. We need a mandatory
code and a regulator so that there | 1:13:23 | 1:13:26 | |
is transparency and we can see
annual reports about child safety, | 1:13:26 | 1:13:29 | |
child endangerment, how it is being
managed and we specific rules, so | 1:13:29 | 1:13:34 | |
the social media companies are held
to account and find if they don't | 1:13:34 | 1:13:38 | |
stick to those rules around child
protection and child safety online. | 1:13:38 | 1:13:42 | |
Are you saying that the government's
inertia on this has damaged or put | 1:13:42 | 1:13:47 | |
at risk more young people? I think
we know for example in the last four | 1:13:47 | 1:13:52 | |
years tragically to young people we
know have lost their lives because | 1:13:52 | 1:13:56 | |
of online grooming, which led to
contact abuse and murder. We know of | 1:13:56 | 1:14:07 | |
the 1300 grooming offences in the
past six months, as we've seen as | 1:14:07 | 1:14:12 | |
the new law has come in. What is
worrying with the internet safety | 1:14:12 | 1:14:17 | |
strategy is that the green paper
will come out at some stage and | 1:14:17 | 1:14:23 | |
grooming will not be included in
that paper. Grooming is seen under | 1:14:23 | 1:14:27 | |
the jurisdiction of the Home Office.
So already we are seeing that really | 1:14:27 | 1:14:32 | |
important aspects are being left out
and the point is this can be done. | 1:14:32 | 1:14:36 | |
We know these big tech companies
have bots and algorithms that can | 1:14:36 | 1:14:41 | |
target advertising the people. In
Germany, they will find social media | 1:14:41 | 1:14:45 | |
companies that don't remove
extremist content. We also know, as | 1:14:45 | 1:14:49 | |
we recently heard, that a
whistleblower said there was a | 1:14:49 | 1:14:52 | |
backlog of child engage in reports.
-- endangerment. It is not being | 1:14:52 | 1:14:57 | |
done properly. We are talking about
child safety and social media | 1:14:57 | 1:15:02 | |
companies have had ten years and
they haven't done anything in a | 1:15:02 | 1:15:05 | |
joined up way that the public
understands. It's not enough now for | 1:15:05 | 1:15:08 | |
the to give them more time and then
say, maybe we will think about | 1:15:08 | 1:15:12 | |
legislation. Time is up. There are
quotes from Theresa May. She was | 1:15:12 | 1:15:17 | |
speaking in Davos. I suspect you
followed this. The quote was, | 1:15:17 | 1:15:23 | |
shareholders should pressure the
Burmese to take their responsibility | 1:15:23 | 1:15:27 | |
towards protecting their users
seriously. | 1:15:27 | 1:15:33 | |
screen. And on BBC radio London. I
am back in 30 minutes. | 1:15:34 | 1:15:35 | |
towards protecting their users
seriously. I think the | 1:15:35 | 1:15:36 | |
responsibility lies with everybody
and I think you have had a great | 1:15:36 | 1:15:40 | |
piece prior to talking to me with
fantastic parents who obviously | 1:15:40 | 1:15:44 | |
really preparing their children to
use the online space safely and are | 1:15:44 | 1:15:48 | |
aware of how their children are
using the online space. It is | 1:15:48 | 1:15:52 | |
everyone's responsibility but this
was a government review that I was | 1:15:52 | 1:15:56 | |
asked to do 10 years ago the
recommendations were made and most | 1:15:56 | 1:16:00 | |
of them, some of them have been
followed through but most haven't. | 1:16:00 | 1:16:04 | |
The point is 10 years ago Snapchat
and Instagram and Twitter didn't | 1:16:04 | 1:16:08 | |
exist, these platforms do now,
technology moves on. Of course | 1:16:08 | 1:16:14 | |
shareholders, stakeholders, parents,
educators, it is everyone's | 1:16:14 | 1:16:17 | |
responsibility in terms of
protecting children but | 1:16:17 | 1:16:21 | |
fundamentally these are huge
companies which makes billions in | 1:16:21 | 1:16:23 | |
profit who have the technology to
target information to users who | 1:16:23 | 1:16:30 | |
have, we understand, a backlog of
child endangerment reports, you have | 1:16:30 | 1:16:34 | |
had 10 years to create the own code
and make it transparent to the | 1:16:34 | 1:16:38 | |
company and they haven't done it and
I think the time is up for them to | 1:16:38 | 1:16:43 | |
take responsibility. My apologies to
interrupting, I know you are a | 1:16:43 | 1:16:46 | |
psychologist Edwards expects that
use anger isn't terribly useful | 1:16:46 | 1:16:50 | |
emotion when trying to get something
done but I am sending you are pretty | 1:16:50 | 1:16:54 | |
angry about this. As a clinician I
am angry, as a clinician I work with | 1:16:54 | 1:16:59 | |
children with mental-health problems
in clinical settings. So we see now, | 1:16:59 | 1:17:05 | |
I mean, I have been doing my job for
many years and over the last 10 | 1:17:05 | 1:17:09 | |
years particularly we are seeing
children come in who are having all | 1:17:09 | 1:17:12 | |
sorts of horrendous experiences
online. As I said before, there are | 1:17:12 | 1:17:17 | |
many people who are responsible for
us to help children understand, we | 1:17:17 | 1:17:20 | |
need to look at education, things
are changing, the Digital economy | 1:17:20 | 1:17:25 | |
act for example, looking at online
pornography, there will be age | 1:17:25 | 1:17:30 | |
verification and these are good
things but the point is we are | 1:17:30 | 1:17:33 | |
talking about child protection and
child safety, we are talking about | 1:17:33 | 1:17:36 | |
two children who died in the last
four years, 1300 children being | 1:17:36 | 1:17:40 | |
groomed online in six months, and
these are the figures we know. I | 1:17:40 | 1:17:44 | |
think anybody should feel angry when
there is the long period of time and | 1:17:44 | 1:17:48 | |
we are saying to the big companies
who said yes, will look at a | 1:17:48 | 1:17:52 | |
voluntary code 10 years, the 10
years is up. I haven't done it. We | 1:17:52 | 1:17:57 | |
now need a mandatory code, a
regulator, and find because child | 1:17:57 | 1:18:01 | |
protection is too important to us to
wait any longer. Very much | 1:18:01 | 1:18:06 | |
appreciate your time. Thank you so
much, a clinical psychologist | 1:18:06 | 1:18:11 | |
they're talking about the report
that she brought out 10 years ago. | 1:18:11 | 1:18:15 | |
It's 7:18 and you're watching
Breakfast from BBC News. | 1:18:15 | 1:18:19 | |
Let's talk to Carol about the
weather. It is getting colder? | 1:18:19 | 1:18:23 | |
Let's talk to Carol about the
weather. It is getting colder? | 1:18:23 | 1:18:26 | |
For many there will be more sunshine
and the wind isn't a strong | 1:18:26 | 1:18:30 | |
bracketing through the next few days
into the weekend, it will still cold | 1:18:30 | 1:18:34 | |
and there is no weather forecast.
Today what we have is a bit of | 1:18:34 | 1:18:38 | |
sunshine around, the high-pressure
across us, also from showers, both | 1:18:38 | 1:18:43 | |
show was draped in the east coast of
England, some of those heavy, with | 1:18:43 | 1:18:47 | |
this and hail and sleep coming out
as well but there are showers so not | 1:18:47 | 1:18:51 | |
all of us will see them. Inland with
the drier conditions, fair amount of | 1:18:51 | 1:18:55 | |
cloud but some clear skies and a
nippy start if you are stepping out. | 1:18:55 | 1:19:00 | |
Across south-west England and Wales,
some showers. These are mostly rain | 1:19:00 | 1:19:04 | |
showers. Again, not all of us see
them. Only three degrees in Cardiff | 1:19:04 | 1:19:09 | |
at ATM. Some bright skies or indeed
one or two showers dotted in here. | 1:19:09 | 1:19:15 | |
The Western, northern and
north-eastern Scotland some showers, | 1:19:15 | 1:19:19 | |
a wintry element in some of them in
the Grampians but a lot of dry | 1:19:19 | 1:19:23 | |
weather and a fair bit of sunshine.
Many of us today it is the story, | 1:19:23 | 1:19:27 | |
dry weather and their lot of
sunshine. The show was in the north | 1:19:27 | 1:19:31 | |
and west tending to peter out to go
through the course of the day. | 1:19:31 | 1:19:35 | |
Showers in the east will tend to
fade a touch lose some of their | 1:19:35 | 1:19:39 | |
intensity as we go through the day.
As soon as this -- there is a keen | 1:19:39 | 1:19:44 | |
wind down the coast, the wind
picking up in the south but for | 1:19:44 | 1:19:47 | |
most, more pleasant feel than
yesterday. This evening and | 1:19:47 | 1:19:51 | |
overnight a weather front comes in
introducing a band of rain. Hill | 1:19:51 | 1:19:54 | |
snow across Northern Ireland, north
Wales and also north England. Hill | 1:19:54 | 1:19:59 | |
snow across Scotland but more modest
levels. We will be heaviest in | 1:19:59 | 1:20:03 | |
south-west England and at the push
through the Midlands we could see | 1:20:03 | 1:20:07 | |
some sleep coming through. There is
the risk of life on untreated | 1:20:07 | 1:20:10 | |
surfaces in the night. Tomorrow, the
weather front stressed to the east | 1:20:10 | 1:20:15 | |
and through the day it turned around
and starts to go back towards the | 1:20:15 | 1:20:19 | |
west. The translator, we are off to
a bright start in the east, a chilly | 1:20:19 | 1:20:24 | |
one, the band of rain, sleet and
snow comes along and behind in | 1:20:24 | 1:20:28 | |
northern Ireland some showers but
some sunshine and then through the | 1:20:28 | 1:20:31 | |
day it starts to pull back towards
the west to where it has been more | 1:20:31 | 1:20:36 | |
dull with the cloud it start to
brighten later on but once again it | 1:20:36 | 1:20:40 | |
will feel cold. But as cold as it
will feel on Sunday because a change | 1:20:40 | 1:20:44 | |
of air mass comes in from the North
Sea, Italy cold easterly wind, you | 1:20:44 | 1:20:48 | |
will most certainly noticed this! It
will drag in a fair bit of cloud and | 1:20:48 | 1:20:53 | |
some wintry showers in the
south-east, the rain, sleet, | 1:20:53 | 1:20:57 | |
possibly hill snow, the brightest
conditions will be in the north-west | 1:20:57 | 1:21:01 | |
and then into the new week as
mentioned remaining cold with some | 1:21:01 | 1:21:04 | |
further snow, we think, on Monday
and Thursday but of course we will | 1:21:04 | 1:21:08 | |
keep you updated on that. Carol,
thank you. May I say you look very | 1:21:08 | 1:21:13 | |
smart this Friday. Thank you! So do
you! Cannot see me does the US | 1:21:13 | 1:21:19 | |
saying that anyway. I am getting
away with nothing! VU later! -- see | 1:21:19 | 1:21:27 | |
you later. | 1:21:27 | 1:21:32 | |
away with nothing! VU later! -- see
you later. Sometimes we get to be | 1:21:32 | 1:21:34 | |
boggled by the numbers in business
and we need to be braced to this | 1:21:34 | 1:21:37 | |
one, don't we, because you have some
very big numbers? Mind boggling. | 1:21:37 | 1:21:42 | |
These are from Apple because they
have reported overnight telling us | 1:21:42 | 1:21:46 | |
about their 3-month profit, good
morning. There are a big part of our | 1:21:46 | 1:21:50 | |
daily lives of course, big business,
and apple have given us the | 1:21:50 | 1:21:54 | |
information about their iPhones last
year. | 1:21:54 | 1:21:56 | |
That didn't stop the tech giant
posting a record profit | 1:21:56 | 1:21:59 | |
of over £14 billion. | 1:21:59 | 1:22:00 | |
That's the largest profit ever made
by a company in three months. | 1:22:00 | 1:22:03 | |
All of that down to its new iPhone X
that costs you nearly | 1:22:03 | 1:22:07 | |
a thousand pounds. | 1:22:07 | 1:22:09 | |
Online retail giant Amazon saw sales
jump by a third last year - | 1:22:09 | 1:22:12 | |
that made them over a £120 billion
in sales and boost profits | 1:22:12 | 1:22:16 | |
by over 30%. | 1:22:16 | 1:22:17 | |
They had a great Christmas,
but subscribers to their Prime | 1:22:17 | 1:22:20 | |
and cloud services
gave them a big boost. | 1:22:20 | 1:22:27 | |
And film and TV firm Netflix signed
up an impressive 8.3m | 1:22:27 | 1:22:30 | |
new subscribers to their streaming
service at the end of last year, | 1:22:30 | 1:22:33 | |
despite upping their prices. | 1:22:33 | 1:22:38 | |
And finally, you might wonder why
I'm dressed like this? | 1:22:38 | 1:22:42 | |
Well, it's the new
normal, apparently. | 1:22:42 | 1:22:44 | |
And not just on dress-down Friday. | 1:22:44 | 1:22:46 | |
Just one in ten British workers now
wears a suit to work with most | 1:22:46 | 1:22:51 | |
office workers, and their bosses,
preferring a more casual dresscode. | 1:22:51 | 1:22:56 | |
In half an hour,
I'll look at whether time's up | 1:22:56 | 1:22:59 | |
for the shirt and tie. | 1:22:59 | 1:23:05 | |
I have to say it feels really weird
to be in the studio dressed like | 1:23:05 | 1:23:10 | |
this. It looks as though you are
ready for a PE lesson. You have your | 1:23:10 | 1:23:14 | |
plimsolls on. Someone told me I look
like I was going to play some | 1:23:14 | 1:23:20 | |
tennis. Thanks, Ben! 7:23 AM. | 1:23:20 | 1:23:29 | |
Today's the final day
of Theresa May's visit to China | 1:23:29 | 1:23:32 | |
and in an interview with the BBC,
she's insisted she's delivering | 1:23:32 | 1:23:35 | |
what the British people want
on Brexit, despite persistent | 1:23:35 | 1:23:38 | |
criticism from within her own party. | 1:23:38 | 1:23:39 | |
Speaking to the BBC's political
editor Laura Kuenssberg, | 1:23:39 | 1:23:41 | |
Theresa May insisted she's setting
out a clear vision to the rest | 1:23:41 | 1:23:45 | |
of the world. | 1:23:45 | 1:23:48 | |
It is important that we deliver
what people want, which is control | 1:23:48 | 1:23:51 | |
of our money, our
borders and our laws. | 1:23:51 | 1:23:53 | |
It's exactly what we are doing. | 1:23:53 | 1:24:00 | |
What I am showing in China is how
we can ensure that we actually | 1:24:00 | 1:24:03 | |
enhance our trade with the rest
of the world as well. | 1:24:03 | 1:24:06 | |
Why do we want to do that? | 1:24:06 | 1:24:08 | |
It is good for people in Britain,
it's good for jobs in Britain. | 1:24:08 | 1:24:12 | |
Prime Minister, can you stay on? | 1:24:12 | 1:24:13 | |
Because people are asking you again
and again to be clearer | 1:24:13 | 1:24:16 | |
about your priorities. | 1:24:16 | 1:24:17 | |
How long can you stay
on, do you believe? | 1:24:17 | 1:24:20 | |
Well, let's be very clear about this
- I've set out what my vision is. | 1:24:20 | 1:24:24 | |
I have set out and I have said
to people that at every stage | 1:24:24 | 1:24:28 | |
where we can fill in
the detail, we will do so, | 1:24:28 | 1:24:31 | |
and that is exactly... | 1:24:31 | 1:24:32 | |
But how long can you stay on? | 1:24:32 | 1:24:34 | |
The idea that we have to have -
that we are about to complete | 1:24:34 | 1:24:37 | |
the negotiation with
the European Union on our future | 1:24:37 | 1:24:40 | |
relationship is wrong. | 1:24:40 | 1:24:41 | |
We are just at the beginning
of the process of negotiating | 1:24:41 | 1:24:44 | |
with the European Union. | 1:24:44 | 1:24:45 | |
So we will be out there ensuring
that the deal we get delivers | 1:24:45 | 1:24:48 | |
on what the British people want. | 1:24:48 | 1:24:50 | |
That's what this is about. | 1:24:50 | 1:24:51 | |
And I know that what the British
people want as well is good jobs | 1:24:51 | 1:24:55 | |
for themselves and their children,
and that is why it is important | 1:24:55 | 1:24:58 | |
for me to be here in China
where businesses have been signing | 1:24:58 | 1:25:02 | |
deals, selling more UK products,
great UK products, into China, | 1:25:02 | 1:25:04 | |
ensuring there are more jobs
for people in the UK. | 1:25:04 | 1:25:07 | |
Do you want to be the Tory leader
at the next general election? | 1:25:07 | 1:25:11 | |
Well, I have been asked this
on a number of occasions. | 1:25:11 | 1:25:14 | |
I've said very clearly
throughout my political career | 1:25:14 | 1:25:16 | |
I have served my country
and I have served my party. | 1:25:16 | 1:25:19 | |
I am not a quitter. | 1:25:19 | 1:25:20 | |
I am in this because there
is a job to be done here, | 1:25:20 | 1:25:24 | |
and that's delivering the British
people and doing that in a way that | 1:25:24 | 1:25:27 | |
ensures the future
prosperity of our country. | 1:25:27 | 1:25:29 | |
Global Britain, global
Britain is a real vision | 1:25:29 | 1:25:31 | |
for the United Kingdom. | 1:25:31 | 1:25:32 | |
I want the British people to see
a government that is delivering | 1:25:32 | 1:25:36 | |
for them around the world,
and that is exactly | 1:25:36 | 1:25:38 | |
what we are doing. | 1:25:38 | 1:25:39 | |
Our viewers see day
after day the Tory party | 1:25:39 | 1:25:42 | |
fighting amongst themselves. | 1:25:42 | 1:25:42 | |
How do you reassert your authority? | 1:25:42 | 1:25:44 | |
I am doing with the British people
want, which is delivering on Brexit | 1:25:44 | 1:25:48 | |
but also getting out around
the world ensuring that we bring | 1:25:48 | 1:25:51 | |
jobs back to Britain. | 1:25:51 | 1:25:52 | |
Companies will be selling more great
British products to China | 1:25:52 | 1:25:54 | |
as a result of this trip. | 1:25:54 | 1:25:56 | |
There will be more people in jobs
in the UK as a result of this trip. | 1:25:56 | 1:26:00 | |
That's global Britain in action. | 1:26:00 | 1:26:02 | |
Prime Minister, thank you very much. | 1:26:02 | 1:26:03 | |
Thank you. | 1:26:03 | 1:26:05 | |
Theresa May there. Reflecting on
some of the thoughts the rapid | 1:26:06 | 1:26:12 | |
programme this morning. | 1:26:12 | 1:26:19 | |
programme this morning. Lots else
coming up as well. | 1:26:19 | 1:26:20 | |
We're not quite talking
Eurovision this morning, | 1:26:20 | 1:26:21 | |
but we are searching
for the European Tree of the Year. | 1:26:21 | 1:26:24 | |
Breakfast's John Maguire's
with the UK's entry. | 1:26:24 | 1:26:27 | |
He is in Gilwell park. Good morning.
Good morning, hope you are well. The | 1:26:27 | 1:26:36 | |
home of international scouting, it
has been here the 99 years and this | 1:26:36 | 1:26:39 | |
tree has been here for around 500
years, something like that. It is a | 1:26:39 | 1:26:44 | |
magnificent oak tree. Imagine the
history it has seen beneath its | 1:26:44 | 1:26:48 | |
branches and bowels. As Baden Powell
and his successors have trained. | 1:26:48 | 1:26:54 | |
Lots of international scouts here,
they will say good morning in their | 1:26:54 | 1:26:58 | |
native tongues. Good morning, folks.
This is the entrance, the British | 1:26:58 | 1:27:06 | |
entrance of the European tree of the
year awards. Join us later, we will | 1:27:06 | 1:27:10 | |
tell you lots about it. All | 1:27:10 | 1:30:31 | |
I suspect. | 1:30:31 | 1:30:31 | |
Maybe some brightness
out in the east. | 1:30:31 | 1:30:33 | |
By Sunday, we've got some very
cold moving through. | 1:30:33 | 1:30:35 | |
We could see some wintry showers. | 1:30:35 | 1:30:37 | |
up a warm if you are heading out. | 1:30:37 | 1:30:39 | |
I'm back in half an hour. | 1:30:39 | 1:30:41 | |
Hello, this is Breakfast,
with Naga Munchetty and Charlie | 1:30:41 | 1:30:43 | |
Stayt. | 1:30:43 | 1:30:45 | |
Here's a summary of this morning's
main stories from BBC News. | 1:30:45 | 1:30:48 | |
The number of men dying in the UK
from prostate cancer has overtaken | 1:30:48 | 1:30:52 | |
the number of women killed by breast
cancer for the first time. | 1:30:52 | 1:30:57 | |
The charity Prostate Cancer UK says
advances in diagnosis and treatment | 1:30:57 | 1:30:59 | |
of breast cancer have paid off | 1:30:59 | 1:31:01 | |
and similar benefits could be seen
if more money was allocated | 1:31:01 | 1:31:04 | |
to the fight against
prostate cancer. | 1:31:04 | 1:31:07 | |
It really is time to actually get
behind this and to realise | 1:31:07 | 1:31:10 | |
that we need to get
on top of it now because | 1:31:10 | 1:31:13 | |
it's just going to become more
common and it will kill more | 1:31:13 | 1:31:16 | |
men if we aren't able to do that. | 1:31:16 | 1:31:20 | |
Health leaders have written
to the Justice Secretary, | 1:31:20 | 1:31:22 | |
urging him to reform the pay-out
system for negligence claims | 1:31:22 | 1:31:24 | |
against the NHS. | 1:31:24 | 1:31:25 | |
They say the NHS would have
to pay up to £65 billion | 1:31:25 | 1:31:29 | |
if all current claims
were successful. | 1:31:29 | 1:31:36 | |
More than double the amount three
years ago. | 1:31:36 | 1:31:38 | |
The government says it is looking
at measures to control costs in | 1:31:38 | 1:31:41 | |
such cases. | 1:31:41 | 1:31:42 | |
Theresa May insists she's delivering
what British people want on Brexit | 1:31:42 | 1:31:45 | |
and setting out a clear vision
to the rest of the world. | 1:31:45 | 1:31:48 | |
Downing Street says billions
of pounds worth of deals have been | 1:31:48 | 1:31:51 | |
signed during her three-day visit
to China, which ends later. | 1:31:51 | 1:31:54 | |
Earlier, the Prime Minister told
the BBC says the deals are good | 1:31:54 | 1:31:57 | |
for British jobs. | 1:31:57 | 1:31:59 | |
We are just at the very beginning of
the process of negotiating with the | 1:31:59 | 1:32:03 | |
European Union, so we will be out
there ensuring that the deal we get | 1:32:03 | 1:32:07 | |
delivers on what the British people
want, that's what this is about. I | 1:32:07 | 1:32:11 | |
know that what the British people
want as well is good jobs for | 1:32:11 | 1:32:15 | |
themselves and their children and
that's why it is important for me to | 1:32:15 | 1:32:18 | |
be here in China, where businesses
have been signing deals, selling | 1:32:18 | 1:32:23 | |
more UK products and bringing them
into China and making sure there are | 1:32:23 | 1:32:26 | |
more jobs for people in the UK. Do
you want to be the Tory leader at | 1:32:26 | 1:32:31 | |
the next general election? I've been
asked this question on a number of | 1:32:31 | 1:32:35 | |
occasions and I've said clearly
throughout my political career I've | 1:32:35 | 1:32:37 | |
served my country my party. I'm not
a quitter. I mean this because there | 1:32:37 | 1:32:42 | |
is a job to be done here. -- I am in
this. | 1:32:42 | 1:32:46 | |
Police investigating the death
of Hollywood star Natalie Wood 37 | 1:32:46 | 1:32:49 | |
years ago say her husband
Robert Wagner is now being treated | 1:32:49 | 1:32:52 | |
as a person of interest. | 1:32:52 | 1:32:53 | |
The actress was found dead
after going missing from a yacht off | 1:32:53 | 1:32:56 | |
the coast of California. | 1:32:56 | 1:32:59 | |
The Government is facing criticism
for failing to implement adequate | 1:32:59 | 1:33:01 | |
safeguards for children online. | 1:33:01 | 1:33:02 | |
In 2008, the Byron Review,
commissioned by Gordon Brown, | 1:33:02 | 1:33:05 | |
put forward 38 recommendations
on internet safety. | 1:33:05 | 1:33:12 | |
The NSPCC says fewer than half have
been properly implemented. | 1:33:12 | 1:33:16 | |
Ministers say they are planning
a voluntary code as part | 1:33:16 | 1:33:19 | |
of their forthcoming
Internet Safety Strategy. | 1:33:19 | 1:33:20 | |
Health experts are calling
on the government to fully fund IVF | 1:33:20 | 1:33:24 | |
treatment to help cut the number
of multiple pregnancies that | 1:33:24 | 1:33:27 | |
are riskier for mothers and babies. | 1:33:27 | 1:33:28 | |
The Royal College of Obstetricians
and Gynaecologists says the health | 1:33:28 | 1:33:31 | |
and financial burden these
pregnancies pose on the NHS | 1:33:31 | 1:33:34 | |
can't be overstated. | 1:33:34 | 1:33:37 | |
Prince Harry and Meghan Markle
presented awards at an event last | 1:33:37 | 1:33:40 | |
night which celebrated
the achievements of wounded, | 1:33:40 | 1:33:42 | |
injured and sick
servicemen and women. | 1:33:42 | 1:33:45 | |
Ms Markle's experience
in the spotlight came in handy | 1:33:45 | 1:33:48 | |
as she helped out her co-presenter,
who struggled with the envelope | 1:33:48 | 1:33:51 | |
containing the names
of the nominees. | 1:33:51 | 1:33:58 | |
And we know from major evens that
getting the wrong envelope and | 1:34:03 | 1:34:07 | |
opening it can be really
embarrassing. Especially if you are | 1:34:07 | 1:34:12 | |
nervous.
It was the Oscars, wasn't it? | 1:34:12 | 1:34:15 | |
They opened the wrong one. Ouch! | 1:34:15 | 1:34:19 | |
The last thing you want to see when
you are taking over as England | 1:34:19 | 1:34:23 | |
manager, when you see one of your
stars badly injured. We are still | 1:34:23 | 1:34:27 | |
waiting for news on the England
goalkeeper and we wish her a speedy | 1:34:27 | 1:34:31 | |
recovery. | 1:34:31 | 1:34:33 | |
Phil Neville was there to see it
last night, his first week in charge | 1:34:33 | 1:34:39 | |
doesn't get any easier. The World
Cup qualifiers are coming up and it | 1:34:39 | 1:34:45 | |
is the last thing he would have
wanted to see. Karen Bardsley, the | 1:34:45 | 1:34:50 | |
England goalkeeper, falling heavy.
She topples right over, falling onto | 1:34:50 | 1:34:55 | |
her shoulder. In just the second
minute of the match as well. The | 1:34:55 | 1:35:00 | |
game was held up for nine minutes
while she was treated on the pitch | 1:35:00 | 1:35:04 | |
and she was taken to hospital. The
game ended goalless. | 1:35:04 | 1:35:07 | |
She has gone off to
hospital to be checked. | 1:35:07 | 1:35:09 | |
She's got a little bit of pain
in her arm and her shoulders, | 1:35:09 | 1:35:13 | |
but she is talking and she seems,
you know, OK and in good spirits, | 1:35:13 | 1:35:16 | |
so we will trust the medical team
to carry on from there. | 1:35:16 | 1:35:20 | |
There is a bit of a silver lining.
It meant just one week after this | 1:35:20 | 1:35:27 | |
18-year-old signed a professional
contract she got her chance and she | 1:35:27 | 1:35:30 | |
pulled off some great saves, keeping
a clean sheet. These are the | 1:35:30 | 1:35:34 | |
pictures she tweeted upon signing
that contract. Well done to her for | 1:35:34 | 1:35:38 | |
stepping into the breach. | 1:35:38 | 1:35:40 | |
The Super League season got back
under way last night. | 1:35:40 | 1:35:42 | |
There were victories for Hull FC
and the champions Leeds. | 1:35:42 | 1:35:45 | |
It was certainly "labour
intensive", though, | 1:35:45 | 1:35:47 | |
for Warrington skipper Chris Hill,
seen here on the left. | 1:35:47 | 1:35:49 | |
He had to leave midway
through the 16-12 loss to Leeds | 1:35:49 | 1:35:52 | |
because his wife went into labour. | 1:35:52 | 1:35:57 | |
So he missed a great try
from England teammate Ryan Hall, | 1:35:57 | 1:36:00 | |
although he had more important
things to worry about last night. | 1:36:00 | 1:36:03 | |
We are still waiting to hear any
news about how the labour is going | 1:36:03 | 1:36:07 | |
or went. Hopefully we have good news
soon. | 1:36:07 | 1:36:12 | |
Kyle Edmund is set to miss
Great Britain's Davis Cup tie | 1:36:12 | 1:36:15 | |
against Spain, which
gets under way today. | 1:36:15 | 1:36:19 | |
He developed a hip injury
during last week's Australian Open | 1:36:19 | 1:36:22 | |
semi-final defeat by Marin Cilic
and wasn't able to get over | 1:36:22 | 1:36:25 | |
it in time. | 1:36:25 | 1:36:26 | |
He's in Marbella to support his
team-mates though and could be | 1:36:26 | 1:36:29 | |
drafted into play should his
injury situation improve. | 1:36:29 | 1:36:31 | |
I'm out here because I
want to be part of it. | 1:36:31 | 1:36:34 | |
It's not like, you know,
I'm trying to put the Davis Cup | 1:36:34 | 1:36:37 | |
second, it's not like that. | 1:36:37 | 1:36:39 | |
I always try and be
ready when I can. | 1:36:39 | 1:36:41 | |
But in one way it was
a good prong because | 1:36:41 | 1:36:44 | |
I made a deep run into
the Australian Open, | 1:36:44 | 1:36:46 | |
so it was a quick turnaround. | 1:36:46 | 1:36:48 | |
If I hadn't done so well I probably
would have spent two weeks | 1:36:48 | 1:36:51 | |
on the clay and been ready for here. | 1:36:51 | 1:36:57 | |
Liam Broady will play
in the first singles rubber. | 1:36:57 | 1:36:59 | |
You can follow the action live
on the Red Button and online | 1:36:59 | 1:37:03 | |
from 9:45am this morning and there's
also coverage on BBC Two from 1pm. | 1:37:03 | 1:37:11 | |
A great weekend of sport ahead with
the start of the Six Nations and it | 1:37:11 | 1:37:16 | |
is also the weekend of the Super
Bowl. | 1:37:16 | 1:37:22 | |
The Sunday evening
the Philadelphia Eagles | 1:37:24 | 1:37:31 | |
and the New England Patriots,
for the right to be 2018's American | 1:37:31 | 1:37:34 | |
football champions and you'll be
able to watch it live | 1:37:34 | 1:37:37 | |
on the BBC including the famous
Super Bowl half-time show. | 1:37:37 | 1:37:40 | |
Last year Lady Gaga wowed
the audience in Houston in front | 1:37:40 | 1:37:43 | |
of a television audience
of more than 170 million | 1:37:43 | 1:37:45 | |
in the United States alone. | 1:37:45 | 1:37:46 | |
Justin Timberlake has the half-time
show honour in Minnesota. | 1:37:46 | 1:37:49 | |
He was asked what inspired him
to take on the challenge. | 1:37:49 | 1:37:52 | |
What was my inspiration? I got this
phone call, write? And they were | 1:37:52 | 1:37:56 | |
like, would you come into do the
half-time show and I was like, | 1:37:56 | 1:38:04 | |
"yeah". That was it. I'm just
excited. My band are kids with | 1:38:04 | 1:38:13 | |
potential and they are my special
guests and I'm excited to rock the | 1:38:13 | 1:38:17 | |
stage. I wonder if he will be
hanging from the ceiling. | 1:38:17 | 1:38:22 | |
All wearing silver hot hands.
You never know. | 1:38:22 | 1:38:27 | |
The stage is almost just as
anticipated as the star himself. | 1:38:27 | 1:38:35 | |
And there's coverage
of the Super Bowl between | 1:38:35 | 1:38:37 | |
the New England Patriots
and the Philadelphia Eagles live | 1:38:37 | 1:38:40 | |
on BBC One and on the Red Button
from 11:15pm on Sunday night. | 1:38:40 | 1:38:43 | |
You will love this. | 1:38:43 | 1:38:44 | |
It's been described as British bull
dog on roller skates, | 1:38:44 | 1:38:50 | |
and the 2018 roller derby World Cup,
is under way in Manchester. | 1:38:50 | 1:38:54 | |
It is very physical. A lot of full
contact challenges. You do have | 1:38:54 | 1:39:00 | |
lockers trying to stop you. England
won the match against Korea. 38 | 1:39:00 | 1:39:06 | |
countries are competing and it is
live on the BBC website and various | 1:39:06 | 1:39:10 | |
TVs as well. What are you not
allowed to do by way of | 1:39:10 | 1:39:15 | |
confrontation?
You will find out tomorrow. I joined | 1:39:15 | 1:39:19 | |
the Indian team in training and I
got a few bruises! Pretty much | 1:39:19 | 1:39:23 | |
anything goes. You where a lot of
padding, so it isn't as dangerous as | 1:39:23 | 1:39:28 | |
it looks. You are pretty much say.
This is a little tease. We have | 1:39:28 | 1:39:35 | |
something special coming up. This is
a very special ball as it belongs to | 1:39:35 | 1:39:41 | |
a freestyle footballer called John
Farnworth. He is going to try to | 1:39:41 | 1:39:45 | |
keep the ball up all the way up
mount Everest and he is joining us | 1:39:45 | 1:39:50 | |
here and he will be coming into the
studio while doing keepy uppies. In | 1:39:50 | 1:39:57 | |
2011 we are doing a preview of the
London Marathon and they kicked his | 1:39:57 | 1:40:02 | |
ball into the River Thames by
mistake. | 1:40:02 | 1:40:04 | |
I fished it out.
What did you do that for? I didn't | 1:40:04 | 1:40:08 | |
mean to! I just wasn't very good at
keepy uppies. You get used to the | 1:40:08 | 1:40:12 | |
certain ball you train with.
And he has special waterproof | 1:40:12 | 1:40:15 | |
trainers.
You would need them for Everest. A | 1:40:15 | 1:40:19 | |
technical question. If you head it,
is that still part of it? | 1:40:19 | 1:40:26 | |
You can use your shoulders,
anything, obviously not your hands. | 1:40:26 | 1:40:31 | |
I thought I had set some kind of
record using my hand, but that's | 1:40:31 | 1:40:36 | |
blown it.
Thank you very much. See you later. | 1:40:36 | 1:40:41 | |
All of the weather coming up in a
few minutes as well. | 1:40:41 | 1:40:45 | |
The NHS will be bankrupt
unless victims of negligence | 1:40:45 | 1:40:47 | |
are paid less in compensation. | 1:40:47 | 1:40:49 | |
Health service leaders have written
to the Justice Secretary calling | 1:40:49 | 1:40:52 | |
for the payments to be cut. | 1:40:52 | 1:40:55 | |
According to the letter,
the NHS in England spent £1.7 | 1:40:55 | 1:40:58 | |
billion on clinical
negligence claims last year. | 1:40:58 | 1:41:00 | |
Niall Dickson, chief
executive of the NHS | 1:41:00 | 1:41:02 | |
Confederation, joins us
from our London studio and is among | 1:41:02 | 1:41:05 | |
those calling for a cap. | 1:41:05 | 1:41:09 | |
Thank you very much for joining us
this morning. Tell us why you are | 1:41:09 | 1:41:14 | |
calling for a cat. The reality from
the Prime Minister downwards is that | 1:41:14 | 1:41:20 | |
everyone accepts that the health
service is under enormous pressure, | 1:41:20 | 1:41:23 | |
which means our members are making
decisions on a daily basis about | 1:41:23 | 1:41:26 | |
what they can provide and what they
can't. We've got to a situation | 1:41:26 | 1:41:30 | |
where criminal negligence claims
have become really neither fair nor | 1:41:30 | 1:41:34 | |
affordable. As you said, £1.7
billion last year. The pipeline of | 1:41:34 | 1:41:39 | |
claims, things coming towards the
health service, is £65 billion and | 1:41:39 | 1:41:44 | |
perhaps even more serious than this
huge numbers, it is rising and in | 1:41:44 | 1:41:48 | |
the last five years it has risen
11.5% every year. That simply | 1:41:48 | 1:41:54 | |
unsustainable. We can't go on like
that. We need to find a fairer | 1:41:54 | 1:41:58 | |
system, a better way of calculating
and a better way of legally managing | 1:41:58 | 1:42:02 | |
this issue. I will tell you a couple
of things that spring to mind and | 1:42:02 | 1:42:06 | |
please do respond to them. The first
is, why are there so many claims? | 1:42:06 | 1:42:10 | |
What is going wrong in the NHS that
people feel, and it's a big step to | 1:42:10 | 1:42:15 | |
take on that they need to make a
claim? The second is that if there a | 1:42:15 | 1:42:19 | |
cap then certain solicitors will
say, it's not worth my while taking | 1:42:19 | 1:42:24 | |
on these cases, the innocent people
who have been wronged won't have the | 1:42:24 | 1:42:28 | |
protection to say, hold on, you need
to fix this. Obviously it needs to | 1:42:28 | 1:42:33 | |
be a balance between what society
can afford and recognising the | 1:42:33 | 1:42:36 | |
people who have been harmed should
be compensated. The issue of why | 1:42:36 | 1:42:41 | |
more people are claiming, I think
part of it is the health service has | 1:42:41 | 1:42:45 | |
got more open culture, which is
right, and it is more transparent | 1:42:45 | 1:42:49 | |
about when things go wrong and that
makes in a way people are told what | 1:42:49 | 1:42:54 | |
has gone wrong more and they are
therefore more likely to make | 1:42:54 | 1:42:58 | |
claims. The health service has to
understand what drives people to | 1:42:58 | 1:43:01 | |
make claims and I'm sure there are
improvements that we can make in the | 1:43:01 | 1:43:05 | |
way that we handle and support
families through that process. There | 1:43:05 | 1:43:09 | |
is certainly a lot of smaller claims
coming through, so there could be a | 1:43:09 | 1:43:14 | |
cultural thing at work here as well,
which encourages people to make | 1:43:14 | 1:43:18 | |
claims. So I think again that a
complex issue. It is not cause | 1:43:18 | 1:43:23 | |
healthcare that doctors are
practising less safely, although | 1:43:23 | 1:43:27 | |
there is a problem that more claims
need more health professionals are | 1:43:27 | 1:43:34 | |
frightened of being sued and the
more likely we go backwards to a | 1:43:34 | 1:43:38 | |
closed culture. On your second point
about lawyers and so forth, again | 1:43:38 | 1:43:42 | |
it's a question of finding a
balance. But at the moment, for | 1:43:42 | 1:43:47 | |
example, there are claims where more
money goes to the law you that the | 1:43:47 | 1:43:52 | |
client and that can't be right
either. There are cases where the | 1:43:52 | 1:43:55 | |
claimants and their lawyer is take
the health service to the door of | 1:43:55 | 1:43:59 | |
the court and then realised the
health service really is going to | 1:43:59 | 1:44:02 | |
defend this and then they disappear
and say,... The health service is | 1:44:02 | 1:44:06 | |
still left with the cost. We need to
find a fairway which absolutely does | 1:44:06 | 1:44:10 | |
compensate people, recognise that we
have a free national health service, | 1:44:10 | 1:44:15 | |
so in a way we shouldn't really be
compensating with private care for | 1:44:15 | 1:44:18 | |
people who should be able to access
free healthcare going forward, but | 1:44:18 | 1:44:23 | |
that they do get their compensation.
There has been a government | 1:44:23 | 1:44:27 | |
response. The Ministry of Justice
says, to help ensure this happens, | 1:44:27 | 1:44:32 | |
fair compensation, it has set out
proposals for a fairer way, setting | 1:44:32 | 1:44:36 | |
the personal discount rate, and
asking the city of justice council | 1:44:36 | 1:44:39 | |
to look at ways of adjusting cost --
civil justice council. On a | 1:44:39 | 1:44:45 | |
practical level how will this work? | 1:44:45 | 1:44:51 | |
Politicians, trying to get them to
look at anything other than Brexit | 1:44:51 | 1:44:55 | |
is difficult, but the civil
liability Bill, the government could | 1:44:55 | 1:44:58 | |
put some of the stuff into it, it
will not be a major reform they | 1:44:58 | 1:45:02 | |
could reverse this change to the
rate which is a self-inflicted wound | 1:45:02 | 1:45:06 | |
by the government, a couple of years
ago by a previous Lord Chancellor, | 1:45:06 | 1:45:11 | |
which is adding, in their estimates,
an extra £1.2 billion in claims | 1:45:11 | 1:45:15 | |
against the public sector. So I
think there are limited things they | 1:45:15 | 1:45:20 | |
could do now but would also like a
more fundamental reform, although we | 1:45:20 | 1:45:25 | |
accept that trying to get
legislation at the moment is | 1:45:25 | 1:45:28 | |
extremely difficult. Chief executive
of the NHS Federation, thank you for | 1:45:28 | 1:45:35 | |
speaking to us and explaining that.
7:45 p.m.. 2.5 minutes of weather | 1:45:35 | 1:45:43 | |
coming up with Carol. Is that all?
It is exactly that! | 1:45:43 | 1:45:50 | |
coming up with Carol. Is that all?
It is exactly that! I had better get | 1:45:50 | 1:45:51 | |
cracking! But as cold as yesterday
and we will have some sunshine, | 1:45:51 | 1:45:57 | |
showers to bring the east and west,
many of them will feature through | 1:45:57 | 1:46:00 | |
the course of the day but through
the east, some sleet and hill mixed | 1:46:00 | 1:46:04 | |
in but the showers, not all of us
will see them. Some dry weather in | 1:46:04 | 1:46:08 | |
between and some sunshine. That is
the case across Northern Ireland | 1:46:08 | 1:46:12 | |
were the cloud will build from the
west. That will herald the arrival | 1:46:12 | 1:46:16 | |
of a new weather front. Scotland is
dry with plenty of sunshine, a | 1:46:16 | 1:46:20 | |
little cold, some showers across the
north-east. The north-west England, | 1:46:20 | 1:46:25 | |
you will have a fine day with a lot
of sunshine but still some of the | 1:46:25 | 1:46:29 | |
showers coming in with a keen wind
across the eastern parts of England. | 1:46:29 | 1:46:32 | |
Through the afternoon it will start
to lose intensity and some will fade | 1:46:32 | 1:46:38 | |
away. East Anglia, Kent, London, the
Midlands, the south-west, dry | 1:46:38 | 1:46:43 | |
weather, some sunshine, a few
showers remaining across south-west | 1:46:43 | 1:46:46 | |
England but most of them will clear
and the same for Wales, look at all | 1:46:46 | 1:46:50 | |
the sunshine. Through the afternoon
you will find the win strengthening | 1:46:50 | 1:46:54 | |
in the south side temperatures will
feel with them this. Some five, six, | 1:46:54 | 1:46:59 | |
seven 's in there. It will feel
pleasant to the time of year. The | 1:46:59 | 1:47:05 | |
weather front comes in across
northern Ireland heading in the | 1:47:05 | 1:47:08 | |
western Scotland, western England
and Wales, pushing towards the | 1:47:08 | 1:47:10 | |
Midlands. Snow on the hills, modest
levels across Scotland, down to | 1:47:10 | 1:47:17 | |
about 250 metres. The heaviest rain
is in south-west England, it pushes | 1:47:17 | 1:47:20 | |
into the Midlands and here we should
be some fleet before the end of the | 1:47:20 | 1:47:25 | |
night. A cold night as well with the
iPhone and treated surfaces. The | 1:47:25 | 1:47:30 | |
culprit is this weather front.
During Saturday it will move from | 1:47:30 | 1:47:34 | |
the west towards the east them
through the day it comes back | 1:47:34 | 1:47:37 | |
towards the west. We start off in
eastern areas under bright skies, a | 1:47:37 | 1:47:42 | |
dry note, then the band of rain,
sleet and hill snow moves from the | 1:47:42 | 1:47:47 | |
west towards the east and behind it
it brightens with some sunshine and | 1:47:47 | 1:47:51 | |
showers in Northern Ireland, Rizk
wind, and then it moves back so we | 1:47:51 | 1:47:55 | |
will see some late afternoon
sunshine in the far east but still, | 1:47:55 | 1:47:58 | |
it's cold. Heading into Sunday, a
bitterly cold day. A bitterly cold | 1:47:58 | 1:48:04 | |
wind driving in a lot of cloud, some
snow showers in the south-east, it | 1:48:04 | 1:48:09 | |
is the west, the north-west, but
also the lion 's share of the | 1:48:09 | 1:48:13 | |
sunshine. The theme continues into
next week and we are looking at | 1:48:13 | 1:48:17 | |
further snow for some on Monday and
Thursday at this stage. Very good. I | 1:48:17 | 1:48:22 | |
further snow for some on Monday and
Thursday at this stage. Very good. I | 1:48:22 | 1:48:23 | |
know you to be charming,
knowledgeable and above all honest | 1:48:23 | 1:48:26 | |
so... What are you talking about? If
I show you the picture of Ben. | 1:48:26 | 1:48:31 | |
Hello, Carol! I don't know if we can
look down a little bit. He is, a | 1:48:31 | 1:48:38 | |
little change this morning. Scruffy!
What do you think was the mark and | 1:48:38 | 1:48:45 | |
always looks gorgeous but I think he
is not dressed for work. See, that | 1:48:45 | 1:48:49 | |
is a fair point. Good observation, I
am with you. Don't see how he was | 1:48:49 | 1:48:55 | |
allowed in the studio in that state!
I agree with Carol, this is the | 1:48:55 | 1:48:59 | |
weirdest thing being here dressed
like this. A suit is a certain kind | 1:48:59 | 1:49:03 | |
of bit of, you know? When I am in a
suit I am in work mode like this | 1:49:03 | 1:49:09 | |
could be going out. I think we have
just seen Carol, you were still in | 1:49:09 | 1:49:14 | |
vision, ripping your microphone off!
Did you notice, Carol, even when she | 1:49:14 | 1:49:19 | |
was doing it it was still smart,
composed, elegant... Ben, sorry. It | 1:49:19 | 1:49:27 | |
depends on your job because that
kind of attire would be suitable for | 1:49:27 | 1:49:31 | |
some jobs. And when we are out on
location in factories and farms I | 1:49:31 | 1:49:37 | |
wear all sorts of different things
so it is just the setting that you | 1:49:37 | 1:49:41 | |
feel like you should wear a suit.
There is a reason I will be talking | 1:49:41 | 1:49:45 | |
about this. | 1:49:45 | 1:49:46 | |
It's not just dress-down Friday,
I'm making a point, | 1:49:46 | 1:49:48 | |
because according to a poll,
only one in ten British workers | 1:49:48 | 1:49:51 | |
wears a suit to work -
including you, and usually me, | 1:49:51 | 1:49:54 | |
Charlie. | 1:49:54 | 1:49:54 | |
Most prefer to be a bit more
casual and half think this | 1:49:54 | 1:49:58 | |
is also more affordable. | 1:49:58 | 1:49:59 | |
Let's speak to Maria who knows about
this, she is principal R fashion | 1:49:59 | 1:50:04 | |
business. Good morning. I have taken
it to the extreme, I probably | 1:50:04 | 1:50:10 | |
couldn't get away with wearing this
in most offices because it is a polo | 1:50:10 | 1:50:14 | |
shirt but the point being more and
more of us are dressing down of this | 1:50:14 | 1:50:19 | |
it is the end of the suit and tie?
For certain industries, the places | 1:50:19 | 1:50:22 | |
you would still be expected to dress
in the wave to the legal profession | 1:50:22 | 1:50:27 | |
for example, you would need to have
a very sharp suit. But in usual | 1:50:27 | 1:50:32 | |
offices now, particularly mainstream
fashion, it has been casual dress. | 1:50:32 | 1:50:37 | |
When I first came into the industry
in the 80s, everyone dressed sharp, | 1:50:37 | 1:50:41 | |
it was the era of the power was sued
for men and women and we introduced | 1:50:41 | 1:50:46 | |
dress down Friday which was amusing
because the man didn't know what to | 1:50:46 | 1:50:49 | |
wear they turned up in their golf
outfits because they really didn't | 1:50:49 | 1:50:52 | |
know what casual or smart casual
boss. That is the thing, there is | 1:50:52 | 1:50:57 | |
safety, a suit and tie especially
for men, you know what he will wear, | 1:50:57 | 1:51:01 | |
it is a suit and you don't need to
make any decisions and it is a | 1:51:01 | 1:51:05 | |
little like a school uniform. You
know what you're everyday. Also | 1:51:05 | 1:51:09 | |
ensure the hierarchy in the office
but now, don't have little | 1:51:09 | 1:51:13 | |
individual officers, we are all open
plan and even structures within | 1:51:13 | 1:51:16 | |
businesses have flattened the people
are not so concerned with hierarchy, | 1:51:16 | 1:51:20 | |
they are more concerned with working
as a team to get things done and who | 1:51:20 | 1:51:24 | |
the boss is isn't that obvious or
important. If a lot of this driven | 1:51:24 | 1:51:29 | |
by the technology firms? They are
notorious, especially in the US, | 1:51:29 | 1:51:35 | |
jeans, jumpers, polo shirts, do we
take influence from them? A little | 1:51:35 | 1:51:39 | |
bit at the creative industries as
well, in our industry you could see | 1:51:39 | 1:51:43 | |
those business report business and
who taught design, different people | 1:51:43 | 1:51:46 | |
and dressed differently, but it is
identity, really. When it comes to | 1:51:46 | 1:51:51 | |
the clothes we do wear, what tell us
about your status? You speak about | 1:51:51 | 1:51:56 | |
the lack of hierarchy but the idea
that you dress because it identifies | 1:51:56 | 1:52:00 | |
you as a certain person within the
business. A certain person but not | 1:52:00 | 1:52:05 | |
hierarchy so it is difficult to go
into an organisation now and pick | 1:52:05 | 1:52:08 | |
out to the boss is because he or she
could be dressed as casually as | 1:52:08 | 1:52:12 | |
everyone else and it isn't unlikely
to go into an industry and the | 1:52:12 | 1:52:16 | |
people in trainers were once it
would have been a really sharp suit | 1:52:16 | 1:52:20 | |
and a good pair of brogues. It is so
interesting, isn't it? It is really | 1:52:20 | 1:52:26 | |
good to see you, Maria. A bit of an
extreme example this morning but it | 1:52:26 | 1:52:31 | |
proves the point you guys think I
would do my job less well if I dress | 1:52:31 | 1:52:35 | |
like this? Forget that I think, this
presence is mentally you would do a | 1:52:35 | 1:52:40 | |
better job than not to be so
concerned with how you look. Others | 1:52:40 | 1:52:44 | |
were worried he didn't use an iron
your polo shirt. It is in this | 1:52:44 | 1:52:49 | |
light. It is ironed! 8750 two AM. I
have not heard of the European tree | 1:52:49 | 1:52:56 | |
of the year before but it exists.
This is our entry | 1:52:56 | 1:53:00 | |
now, | 1:53:00 | 1:53:03 | |
the Gilwell Oak, which has
a brilliant story behind it. | 1:53:03 | 1:53:06 | |
Breakfast's John Maguire's
there in Essex for us this morning. | 1:53:06 | 1:53:09 | |
smartly dressed unsure behind the
tree! I hope so! A couple leave you | 1:53:09 | 1:53:14 | |
haven't heard of the European tree
of the year awards, we talked about | 1:53:14 | 1:53:18 | |
this in March! This is the Gilwell
oak, the home of worldwide scouting | 1:53:18 | 1:53:23 | |
in the park, this tree is 500 years
old and this place is 99 years old, | 1:53:23 | 1:53:29 | |
its Centenary is next year, and this
is a group of scouts. Good morning. | 1:53:29 | 1:53:33 | |
I'm from Germany. My name is
Patricia, I'm from Mexico. I'm from | 1:53:33 | 1:53:41 | |
South Africa. Howdy, I'm from the
states. Good morning, my name is | 1:53:41 | 1:53:49 | |
Sarah, I am from Germany. My name is
Lera, I'm from Mexico. Good morning, | 1:53:49 | 1:53:55 | |
it is me, John from BBC Breakfast.
Let's show you Caroline from the | 1:53:55 | 1:54:01 | |
scouts. Why is this place important
and why is history important? The | 1:54:01 | 1:54:06 | |
oak has been standing over Gilwell
and it has seen so much over 99 | 1:54:06 | 1:54:11 | |
years, the scouts came here to
participate in a training course to | 1:54:11 | 1:54:15 | |
learn the skills that they would be
able to pass on to young people to | 1:54:15 | 1:54:19 | |
support them in their lives. This is
a photo from the 1920s when Baden | 1:54:19 | 1:54:23 | |
Powell may have been alive? He would
have sat here under the oak and | 1:54:23 | 1:54:28 | |
passed on his wisdom and created the
movement that so massively globally | 1:54:28 | 1:54:33 | |
successful today. Exactly and
quickly those courses became | 1:54:33 | 1:54:36 | |
international, Baden Powell was the
chief scout of the world and by 1920 | 1:54:36 | 1:54:41 | |
leaders came from France, America,
India. They took back the learning | 1:54:41 | 1:54:44 | |
that they learned here, they then
passed it on to young people. This | 1:54:44 | 1:54:49 | |
is why this tree is Britain 's entry
because of the relationship with | 1:54:49 | 1:54:53 | |
people, history, the world. It is,
and the oak tree is deeply symbolic | 1:54:53 | 1:54:59 | |
in scouting, Baden Powell used the
analogy oak tree growing from the | 1:54:59 | 1:55:03 | |
acorn from the 20 boys who took to
the island on the experimental camp | 1:55:03 | 1:55:07 | |
in 1907. They became the oak tree of
scouting that cover the world. | 1:55:07 | 1:55:13 | |
Caroline, thank you indeed. The
European tree of the year award. | 1:55:13 | 1:55:20 | |
Voting is open now, go online and
vote for it. Let's say goodbye or | 1:55:20 | 1:55:26 | |
maybe see you later or something in
all about different linkages. Have a | 1:55:26 | 1:55:30 | |
good one folks! There we are. What
an international program we are! | 1:55:30 | 1:55:39 | |
John, to get the scouts badge for
correcting the surface sitting | 1:55:39 | 1:55:45 | |
present awards this morning. For me
not remembering. I would never | 1:55:45 | 1:55:49 | |
normally do that, Charlie. He is
correct to do it. I remember that | 1:55:49 | 1:55:53 | |
peace in March. Very clearly! | 1:55:53 | 1:55:59 | |
Still to come this morning,
we'll meet John Farnworth who's | 1:55:59 | 1:56:02 | |
taken record-breaking
to a new level. | 1:56:02 | 1:56:04 | |
He's hoping to do 'keepy-uppies'
continuously for two weeks | 1:56:04 | 1:56:06 | |
while trekking to Everest base camp. | 1:56:06 | 1:56:11 | |
That sounds tough enough. | 1:56:11 | 1:56:13 | |
He's just outside our building now
and he'll be making his way | 1:56:13 | 1:56:16 | |
on to our sofa, with his
football, just after 8:30. | 1:56:16 | 1:56:23 | |
Can you teach him a thing or two,
Charlie do you think? Not in | 1:56:23 | 1:56:28 | |
relation to that, no! Time to get
the news, travel and | 1:56:28 | 1:59:54 | |
Plenty more on our website,
the address on your screen there, | 1:59:54 | 1:59:57 | |
and on BBC Radio London. | 1:59:57 | 1:59:58 | |
Now though it's back
to Charlie and Naga. | 1:59:58 | 2:00:00 | |
Hello, this is Breakfast, with
Charlie Stayt and Naga Munchetty. | 2:00:01 | 2:00:03 | |
The number of men dying
from prostate cancer overtakes | 2:00:03 | 2:00:05 | |
the number of women killed by breast
cancer for the first time. | 2:00:05 | 2:00:08 | |
It's now the third biggest
cancer killer in the UK. | 2:00:08 | 2:00:11 | |
Charities are calling for more
screening and research | 2:00:11 | 2:00:13 | |
into the disease. | 2:00:13 | 2:00:16 | |
Good morning. | 2:00:27 | 2:00:28 | |
It's Friday, the 2nd of February. | 2:00:28 | 2:00:30 | |
Also this morning. | 2:00:30 | 2:00:33 | |
The Prime Minister says her trip
to China is a sign of a "global | 2:00:33 | 2:00:36 | |
Britain" and insists
that she is delivering | 2:00:36 | 2:00:38 | |
what people want on Brexit. | 2:00:38 | 2:00:44 | |
Do you want to be the Tory leader
at the next general election? | 2:00:44 | 2:00:47 | |
I have been asked this
question on a number of | 2:00:47 | 2:00:50 | |
occasions and I have said very
clearly throughout my political | 2:00:50 | 2:00:52 | |
career I have served my country
and I have served my party. | 2:00:52 | 2:00:55 | |
I am not a quitter. | 2:00:55 | 2:00:56 | |
An investigation into the mystery
death of Hollywood star Natalie Wood | 2:00:56 | 2:00:59 | |
more than 30 years ago
says her husband Robert | 2:00:59 | 2:01:01 | |
Wagner is being treated
as a "person of interest." | 2:01:01 | 2:01:09 | |
Tech giant Apple reports the biggest
ever company profit of £14 billion | 2:01:10 | 2:01:13 | |
for the last three months. | 2:01:13 | 2:01:16 | |
But sales of its iPhone are down. | 2:01:16 | 2:01:21 | |
In sport. | 2:01:21 | 2:01:22 | |
A painful blow for England's women. | 2:01:22 | 2:01:24 | |
Goalkeeper Karen Bardsley
is stretchered off after a nasty | 2:01:24 | 2:01:30 | |
fall onto her shoulder very early
in the Chelsea and Man City game | 2:01:30 | 2:01:33 | |
and could miss crucial
World Cup qualifiers. | 2:01:33 | 2:01:37 | |
Good morning, the home of
international scouting here and is | 2:01:37 | 2:01:41 | |
home to this oak tree, our entry
into the European tree of the year | 2:01:41 | 2:01:46 | |
awards. | 2:01:46 | 2:01:51 | |
For many of us, dry and sunny. At
the moment, we have showers but they | 2:01:51 | 2:01:57 | |
will fade through the day, some will
have sleet and hail in the east. It | 2:01:57 | 2:02:03 | |
will feel cold, that continues right
into next week, more in 15 minutes. | 2:02:03 | 2:02:07 | |
Good morning. | 2:02:07 | 2:02:08 | |
First, our main story. | 2:02:08 | 2:02:09 | |
The number of men dying in the UK
from prostate cancer has overtaken | 2:02:09 | 2:02:13 | |
the number of women killed by breast
cancer for the first time. | 2:02:13 | 2:02:20 | |
The charity Prostate Cancer UK says
advances in diagnosis | 2:02:20 | 2:02:22 | |
and treatment of breast cancer have
paid off and similar benefits | 2:02:22 | 2:02:25 | |
could be seen if more money
was allocated to the fight | 2:02:25 | 2:02:27 | |
against prostate cancer. | 2:02:27 | 2:02:28 | |
Here's our health
correspondent Dominic Hughes. | 2:02:28 | 2:02:34 | |
Prostate cancer does
not discriminate. | 2:02:34 | 2:02:37 | |
Last year, keen runner Tony Callier
discovered he had the disease | 2:02:37 | 2:02:39 | |
while training for an ultramarathon. | 2:02:39 | 2:02:41 | |
His diagnosis was late,
and he knows cancer will eventually | 2:02:41 | 2:02:43 | |
take his life, so Tony
is using the time he has left | 2:02:43 | 2:02:46 | |
to warn other men about the dangers. | 2:02:46 | 2:02:49 | |
I think it's really important
that people are aware | 2:02:49 | 2:02:52 | |
of what the symptoms
are and I would actually urge men | 2:02:52 | 2:02:56 | |
to talk to their doctors,
if they have any | 2:02:56 | 2:02:59 | |
urinary issues at all. | 2:02:59 | 2:03:00 | |
My issue is that I didn't
actually have any symptoms | 2:03:00 | 2:03:04 | |
and they think I'd had the cancer
for ten years beforehand. | 2:03:04 | 2:03:07 | |
More men are living to an age
where they have a greater chance | 2:03:07 | 2:03:10 | |
of developing prostate cancer. | 2:03:10 | 2:03:11 | |
So, in 2015, more than 11,800 men
died of the disease, | 2:03:11 | 2:03:16 | |
compared with just over 11,400
deaths in 2015 due to breast cancer. | 2:03:16 | 2:03:24 | |
And while the proportion
of people dying from | 2:03:24 | 2:03:26 | |
prostate cancer, the mortality rate,
has fallen in the past decade, | 2:03:26 | 2:03:30 | |
down by 6%, the decline in deaths
from breast cancer has been | 2:03:30 | 2:03:33 | |
even greater, at more than 10%. | 2:03:33 | 2:03:36 | |
It is time to get behind this
and to realise that we need to get | 2:03:36 | 2:03:39 | |
on top of it now because it
will just become more common, | 2:03:39 | 2:03:42 | |
and it is actually going to kill
more men, if we are not able | 2:03:42 | 2:03:46 | |
to do that. | 2:03:46 | 2:03:47 | |
Tony has joined those calling
for increased funding for research | 2:03:47 | 2:03:51 | |
and the development of a reliable
prostate screening programme, | 2:03:51 | 2:03:53 | |
so the gains seen in the fight
against breast cancer can be matched | 2:03:53 | 2:03:58 | |
in the fight against
the disease that he knows | 2:03:58 | 2:04:00 | |
will eventually claim his life, too. | 2:04:00 | 2:04:04 | |
Health leaders have written
to the Justice Secretary urging him | 2:04:04 | 2:04:07 | |
to reform the pay-out system
for negligence claims | 2:04:07 | 2:04:09 | |
against the NHS. | 2:04:09 | 2:04:16 | |
They say the NHS would have
to pay up to £65 billion | 2:04:16 | 2:04:19 | |
if all current claims
were successful, more than double | 2:04:19 | 2:04:21 | |
the amount three years ago. | 2:04:21 | 2:04:22 | |
The Government says it is looking
at measures to control | 2:04:22 | 2:04:24 | |
costs in such cases. | 2:04:24 | 2:04:27 | |
Speaking earlier on Breakfast,
the chief executive of the NHS | 2:04:27 | 2:04:31 | |
Confederation, Niall Dickson told us
there has to be a cap on the claims. | 2:04:31 | 2:04:36 | |
It is not because health care that
doctors are practising less safely. | 2:04:36 | 2:04:41 | |
There is a problem,
the more claims there, | 2:04:41 | 2:04:47 | |
the more our professionals | 2:04:47 | 2:04:48 | |
are frightened of being sued
and the more likely it is we go | 2:04:48 | 2:04:51 | |
backwards and we go
to closed culture. | 2:04:51 | 2:04:53 | |
Theresa May insists she's delivering
what British people want on Brexit, | 2:04:53 | 2:04:55 | |
and setting out a clear vision
to the rest of the world. | 2:04:55 | 2:05:00 | |
Downing Street says
billions of pounds' worth | 2:05:00 | 2:05:01 | |
of deals have been signed
during her three-day visit | 2:05:01 | 2:05:04 | |
to China which ends later. | 2:05:04 | 2:05:06 | |
Earlier, the Prime Minister told
the BBC says the deals | 2:05:06 | 2:05:08 | |
are good for British jobs. | 2:05:08 | 2:05:16 | |
We are at the beginning of the
process of negotiating with the EU. | 2:05:17 | 2:05:21 | |
We want to reassure the deal we get
delivers on what the British people | 2:05:21 | 2:05:25 | |
want. I know what the British people
want is good jobs for themselves and | 2:05:25 | 2:05:29 | |
their children and that is why it is
important for me to be here in China | 2:05:29 | 2:05:33 | |
where businesses have been signing
deals, selling more UK products, | 2:05:33 | 2:05:38 | |
ensuring there are more jobs for
people in the UK. | 2:05:38 | 2:05:42 | |
Do you to be the Tory leader at the
next general election? | 2:05:42 | 2:05:46 | |
I have been asked this on a number
of occasions. I have said clearly | 2:05:46 | 2:05:50 | |
throughout my political career I
have served my country and my party. | 2:05:50 | 2:05:53 | |
I am not a quitter, I am in this
because there is a job to be done | 2:05:53 | 2:05:58 | |
here. | 2:05:58 | 2:06:00 | |
Our correspondent Robin Brant
joins us from Shanghai. | 2:06:00 | 2:06:05 | |
In politics, it's not just what you
say but the way you say it and there | 2:06:05 | 2:06:09 | |
has been scrutiny on Theresa May in
this trip. | 2:06:09 | 2:06:13 | |
Yes, a combative interview. She said
she is not a quitter and she intends | 2:06:13 | 2:06:20 | |
to stay and fight the general
election in 2022 as Prime Minister | 2:06:20 | 2:06:25 | |
and leader of the Tory Party.
Downing Street will be frustrated by | 2:06:25 | 2:06:30 | |
this uncertainty around Brexit, and
negotiations, and her leadership, | 2:06:30 | 2:06:35 | |
coming from some on her own side. As
this trip ends, they will be pleased | 2:06:35 | 2:06:42 | |
they have £9 billion of trade deals
ranging from BP, Aston Martin, two | 2:06:42 | 2:06:49 | |
smaller medical companies. She has
met Xi Jinping, has had reassurance | 2:06:49 | 2:06:55 | |
from her counterpart, that whatever
happens with Brexit, the | 2:06:55 | 2:07:00 | |
relationship between China and the
UK will not change. | 2:07:00 | 2:07:02 | |
This is for the Prime Minister more
jobs in the UK, selling more | 2:07:02 | 2:07:08 | |
products, and China want a more
strategic partnership. It has two | 2:07:08 | 2:07:14 | |
improved from its a exporting
partner. | 2:07:14 | 2:07:23 | |
Police investigating
the death of Hollywood star | 2:07:23 | 2:07:24 | |
Natalie Wood 37 years ago
say her husband Robert Wagner | 2:07:24 | 2:07:27 | |
is now being treated
as a "person of interest". | 2:07:27 | 2:07:29 | |
The actress was found dead
after going missing from a yacht off | 2:07:29 | 2:07:32 | |
the coast of California. | 2:07:32 | 2:07:33 | |
Our Los Angeles correspondent
James Cook has more details. | 2:07:33 | 2:07:36 | |
Natalie Wood was a Hollywood
superstar with three Oscar | 2:07:36 | 2:07:38 | |
nominations when she died suddenly
in 1981 at the age of just 43. | 2:07:38 | 2:07:46 | |
Her body was found floating
in the water off the coast | 2:07:47 | 2:07:49 | |
of California near the yacht
on which she was sailing | 2:07:49 | 2:07:52 | |
with her husband Robert Wagner,
co-star Christopher Walken | 2:07:52 | 2:07:54 | |
and the boat's captain. | 2:07:54 | 2:08:00 | |
Initially the death was ruled
an accident, but the inquiry | 2:08:00 | 2:08:02 | |
was reopened in 2011. | 2:08:02 | 2:08:03 | |
Police now say that two
new witnesses have corroborated | 2:08:03 | 2:08:05 | |
accounts of a fight
between Mr Wagner and Ms Wood | 2:08:05 | 2:08:08 | |
on the night she disappeared. | 2:08:08 | 2:08:11 | |
Detectives say it appears
she was the victim of an assault | 2:08:11 | 2:08:13 | |
and they believe her husband
was the last person | 2:08:13 | 2:08:15 | |
to see her alive. | 2:08:15 | 2:08:18 | |
Police say Robert Wagner has
refused to speak to them | 2:08:18 | 2:08:20 | |
since the case was reopened. | 2:08:20 | 2:08:25 | |
They've not declared the death
a murder and no charges have been | 2:08:25 | 2:08:28 | |
filed against the actor. | 2:08:28 | 2:08:29 | |
He is now 87-years-old
and has not commented | 2:08:29 | 2:08:31 | |
on the latest developments. | 2:08:31 | 2:08:38 | |
The NSPCC has accued the Government
of "dragging its feet" when it comes | 2:08:38 | 2:08:41 | |
to protecting children online. | 2:08:41 | 2:08:43 | |
The charity says ministers have
failed to implement half | 2:08:43 | 2:08:46 | |
of the recommendations made
in a report which was | 2:08:46 | 2:08:48 | |
commissioned a decade ago. | 2:08:48 | 2:08:49 | |
MPs say they are planning
a voluntary code as part | 2:08:49 | 2:08:52 | |
of the Internet Safety Strategy. | 2:08:52 | 2:08:53 | |
Sarah Campbell reports. | 2:08:53 | 2:08:57 | |
This is the online generation. | 2:08:57 | 2:09:01 | |
Over the past decade the internet
and its use has expanded rapidly. | 2:09:01 | 2:09:04 | |
Instagram, Snapchat and WhatsApp
didn't even exist in 2008. | 2:09:04 | 2:09:07 | |
Back then, Professor Tanya Byron
was asked by the then | 2:09:07 | 2:09:09 | |
Prime Minister to look
into children's safety online. | 2:09:09 | 2:09:16 | |
Ten years on, the NSPCC
says less than half | 2:09:16 | 2:09:18 | |
of the recommendations have
been put into place. | 2:09:18 | 2:09:20 | |
The UK Council for Child Internet
Safety was established. | 2:09:20 | 2:09:26 | |
Video games now have
to have an age rating, | 2:09:26 | 2:09:29 | |
but the charity says there's been no
improvement to parental controls | 2:09:29 | 2:09:34 | |
for games consoles and no code
of practice is yet in place | 2:09:34 | 2:09:37 | |
for the online industry. | 2:09:37 | 2:09:38 | |
The Government has really
dragged their feet in implementing | 2:09:38 | 2:09:41 | |
recommendations from what was
a landmark report ten years | 2:09:41 | 2:09:43 | |
ago by Professor Byron
that was supposed to be | 2:09:43 | 2:09:45 | |
a comprehensive package
to keep children safe. | 2:09:45 | 2:09:50 | |
Those measures haven't
been acted on and is | 2:09:50 | 2:09:52 | |
clearly essential that
now | 2:09:52 | 2:09:53 | |
we do see the Government take steps,
in particular introducing a code | 2:09:53 | 2:09:56 | |
of practice and an independent
regulator to make social | 2:09:56 | 2:09:58 | |
networks keep children safe. | 2:09:58 | 2:10:03 | |
The Government says it does intend
to introduce a voluntary code | 2:10:03 | 2:10:06 | |
of practice for social media
networks and it says | 2:10:06 | 2:10:08 | |
changes to the law will also be
considered to compel companies | 2:10:08 | 2:10:11 | |
to reduce the risks their
science pose to children. | 2:10:11 | 2:10:19 | |
Health experts are calling
on the Government to fully fund IVF | 2:10:21 | 2:10:23 | |
treatment to help cut the number
of multiple pregnancies that | 2:10:23 | 2:10:26 | |
are risky for mothers and babies. | 2:10:26 | 2:10:27 | |
The Royal College of
Obstetricians and Gynaecologists | 2:10:27 | 2:10:29 | |
says the health and financial burden
these pregnancies pose on the NHS | 2:10:29 | 2:10:32 | |
can't be overstated. | 2:10:32 | 2:10:40 | |
Prince Harry and Meghan Markle
presented awards at an event last | 2:10:41 | 2:10:45 | |
night celebrating the achievements
of service men and women. The | 2:10:45 | 2:10:49 | |
appearance in the spotlight came in
handy for Meghan Markle as she held | 2:10:49 | 2:10:56 | |
out her co-presenter in a mix-up
over envelopes. | 2:10:56 | 2:11:03 | |
over envelopes. It happens, doesn't
it! An important occasion. | 2:11:03 | 2:11:11 | |
The number of men dying
from prostate cancer every year has | 2:11:17 | 2:11:19 | |
overtaken the number of women dying
from breast cancer, | 2:11:19 | 2:11:23 | |
according to a charity. | 2:11:23 | 2:11:27 | |
More than 47,000 men are diagnosed
with prostate cancer | 2:11:27 | 2:11:29 | |
every year in the UK. | 2:11:29 | 2:11:31 | |
That's 129 men every day. | 2:11:31 | 2:11:34 | |
Only men have a prostate gland. | 2:11:34 | 2:11:37 | |
It is usually the size and shape
of a walnut and sits | 2:11:37 | 2:11:40 | |
underneath the bladder. | 2:11:40 | 2:11:42 | |
Most men with early
prostate cancer don't have | 2:11:42 | 2:11:44 | |
any signs or symptoms,
but some men may experience | 2:11:44 | 2:11:47 | |
urinary problems. | 2:11:47 | 2:11:48 | |
Prostate cancer is the most
common cancer in men. | 2:11:48 | 2:11:52 | |
Those aged over 50, particularly
black men and those with a family | 2:11:52 | 2:11:55 | |
history of the disease
are most at risk. | 2:11:55 | 2:11:59 | |
We're joined now by Rob Bristow,
Professor of Cancer Studies | 2:11:59 | 2:12:01 | |
and Chief Academic Officer
at The Christie. | 2:12:01 | 2:12:03 | |
And also by Errol McKellar,
who was diagnosed with | 2:12:03 | 2:12:05 | |
prostate cancer in 2010. | 2:12:05 | 2:12:11 | |
Good morning to you. Lovely to see
you here. You are one of the success | 2:12:11 | 2:12:20 | |
stories. Take us through the
sequence of events in 2010? | 2:12:20 | 2:12:25 | |
My journey with prostate cancer
started in 2010 when my wife Sharon | 2:12:25 | 2:12:30 | |
was complaining about my snoring. As
you know with all women, once they | 2:12:30 | 2:12:36 | |
start moaning about something Stott
now, now! | 2:12:36 | 2:12:42 | |
I said, make an appointment with the
doctor and I will go. I sat down in | 2:12:42 | 2:12:47 | |
the reception room waiting for the
doctor and picked up a leaflet from | 2:12:47 | 2:12:53 | |
Prostate Cancer UK. I thought, let
me make an appointment to come back. | 2:12:53 | 2:12:59 | |
Something you hadn't thought about
before? | 2:12:59 | 2:13:02 | |
If I had thought about it, I don't
remember. I went to reception and | 2:13:02 | 2:13:08 | |
said, can I make an appointment to
come back and do this test? | 2:13:08 | 2:13:13 | |
She said, you don't need to make an
appointment, the blood test takes | 2:13:13 | 2:13:17 | |
less than ten minutes. That tenants
would change the rest of my life. I | 2:13:17 | 2:13:22 | |
did that last -- the blood test.
-- that test. I said to my wife, by | 2:13:22 | 2:13:32 | |
the way, when I went to see the
doctor about my snoring, I did a | 2:13:32 | 2:13:36 | |
test for prostate cancer. Luckily,
she finished dinner so I had dinner | 2:13:36 | 2:13:44 | |
that night! Next week, I got a call
for another blood test, and another | 2:13:44 | 2:13:49 | |
phone call to do a biopsy.
What was the length of time? The | 2:13:49 | 2:13:54 | |
first blood test I had, then the
week after, then a call for another | 2:13:54 | 2:14:02 | |
blood test. Pretty quick. Within two
weeks of the second blood test, I | 2:14:02 | 2:14:09 | |
had it called for a biopsy.
It is compelling hearing your | 2:14:09 | 2:14:13 | |
account of how it works in practice.
What has happened? To move the story | 2:14:13 | 2:14:22 | |
on, the doctor sat me down in a room
after the scan and said, your | 2:14:22 | 2:14:27 | |
prostate is covered in cancer. I
walked out because I didn't think he | 2:14:27 | 2:14:31 | |
was talking to me. When I sat in my
car, I think the word, cancer, hit | 2:14:31 | 2:14:39 | |
me. I don't know if I was scared or
frightened, but I cried like a baby. | 2:14:39 | 2:14:45 | |
My wife sat in the car with me and
said, in all the years I have known | 2:14:45 | 2:14:50 | |
you, you have never quitted. I
thought she was having a go but | 2:14:50 | 2:14:54 | |
actually she was picking me up. We
both got out, went in to the doctor | 2:14:54 | 2:15:00 | |
and I said, what do I need to do to
deal with this problem? He said, if | 2:15:00 | 2:15:05 | |
we don't remove your prostate, you
could be dead in six months. For me, | 2:15:05 | 2:15:11 | |
that is the seriousness of that
conversation. I had the operation to | 2:15:11 | 2:15:17 | |
remove my prostate, there were still
some cancer issues and I needed | 2:15:17 | 2:15:22 | |
radiotherapy that three months. In
that time, I needed to find a way to | 2:15:22 | 2:15:28 | |
get through it.
What is so clear here is, Doctor, if | 2:15:28 | 2:15:35 | |
you don't address these issues, six
months, just from picking up a | 2:15:35 | 2:15:40 | |
leaflet, there needs to be a process
for men to be told, this needs to be | 2:15:40 | 2:15:46 | |
part of your thinking every day. It
isn't which is why we are seeing the | 2:15:46 | 2:15:50 | |
number of them dying on prostate
cancer overtaking the number of | 2:15:50 | 2:15:55 | |
women dying from breast cancer.
That number is staggering, over | 2:15:55 | 2:16:01 | |
11,000 men dying.
What we are doing is trying to get | 2:16:01 | 2:16:04 | |
the message out. If you took care of
your car, the same way you took care | 2:16:04 | 2:16:10 | |
of your body, you would be thinking
every 10,000 miles, it is the same | 2:16:10 | 2:16:15 | |
with your help. Think about getting
this test, asking your GP. At the | 2:16:15 | 2:16:25 | |
age of 50. If you have a family
history. If you have African | 2:16:25 | 2:16:29 | |
heritage. | 2:16:29 | 2:16:34 | |
Women have screening programmes at
the moment and men don't. Why is | 2:16:35 | 2:16:38 | |
that? Is that justified? You're
absolutely right. We need more | 2:16:38 | 2:16:43 | |
research to get a better screening
programme. The test we have is a | 2:16:43 | 2:16:47 | |
start but it isn't a perfect test
and sometimes you can pick up | 2:16:47 | 2:16:51 | |
conditions not related to cancer,
and sometimes we pick up very early | 2:16:51 | 2:16:55 | |
cancers that thankfully don't need
treatment so we need a better test | 2:16:55 | 2:16:58 | |
to pick up the aggressive cancers,
and those are on the horizon and | 2:16:58 | 2:17:05 | |
Prostate UK is involved, looking at
men's genetics as well as extra | 2:17:05 | 2:17:10 | |
things, to really have a bespoke and
precision approach to screening for | 2:17:10 | 2:17:14 | |
cancer. Errol, you and I are not
dissimilar in terms of age. You are | 2:17:14 | 2:17:19 | |
a little older... I like how you got
that end, very quickly! | 2:17:19 | 2:17:23 | |
LAUGHTER
But is there a generational thing? I | 2:17:23 | 2:17:26 | |
would include myself in the category
of men who very rarely go to the | 2:17:26 | 2:17:31 | |
doctor, tend to ignore things,
haven't had my prostate checked. | 2:17:31 | 2:17:38 | |
Which you will after today. But it
is interesting. Do you think there | 2:17:38 | 2:17:42 | |
is a generational thing? A certain
generation of men just don't... Let | 2:17:42 | 2:17:48 | |
me tell you in mechanical terms
because that is what I know best. | 2:17:48 | 2:17:52 | |
The doctor has brought the
conversation about cars. It is | 2:17:52 | 2:17:55 | |
illegal to drive your car without an
MOT. If you drive down the road and | 2:17:55 | 2:17:59 | |
you're stopped without | 2:17:59 | 2:18:05 | |
you're stopped without an MOT, £100
fine. I could walk out of your with | 2:18:05 | 2:18:08 | |
cancer, and no one tears. So that
doesn't work for me. It is an issue | 2:18:08 | 2:18:12 | |
we need to address -- no one cares.
In my garage I offer people a 20% | 2:18:12 | 2:18:18 | |
discount on the repairs I did in
their cars. How that came up, I came | 2:18:18 | 2:18:22 | |
back to work after six months of
being out of work and the guy came | 2:18:22 | 2:18:26 | |
into my garage in the first week I
came back, and he was talking about | 2:18:26 | 2:18:29 | |
while I was away, and just in the
conversation I said when was the | 2:18:29 | 2:18:33 | |
last time you had your prostate
checked, and he said what does that | 2:18:33 | 2:18:35 | |
have to do with my gearbox? I said,
look, I will give you 20% discount, | 2:18:35 | 2:18:42 | |
if you go and get your prostate
checked. Two weeks later he came | 2:18:42 | 2:18:46 | |
into my garage weaving this bit of
paper and I have to be honest all I | 2:18:46 | 2:18:50 | |
thought was, this is just cost me
200 quid. Missing a trick here, some | 2:18:50 | 2:18:56 | |
kind of system set up with garages,
Doctor? It is really interesting you | 2:18:56 | 2:19:02 | |
see that. Maybe down the road the
test will become really easy and | 2:19:02 | 2:19:05 | |
much more accurate but I think what
you're hearing today, despite that | 2:19:05 | 2:19:09 | |
high number what we need is research
driving forward a screening | 2:19:09 | 2:19:12 | |
programme that is better as well of
course as the precision methods. | 2:19:12 | 2:19:17 | |
Thank you both for coming in and
thank you for sharing your story. | 2:19:17 | 2:19:26 | |
Yes, hopefully we will read some
comments a little later. | 2:19:26 | 2:19:32 | |
Carol has the weather. You're going
to tell us it is getting colder? | 2:19:32 | 2:19:36 | |
Carol has the weather. You're going
to tell us it is getting colder? | 2:19:36 | 2:19:36 | |
Yes, it is chilly, not the strong
wind we had across the UK yesterday | 2:19:36 | 2:19:42 | |
so not quite as bitter but those
showers we do have and they adopted | 2:19:42 | 2:19:47 | |
across Europe, parts of Wales in
south-west England, northern | 2:19:47 | 2:19:51 | |
Scotland, and we have heavier
showers down the east coast as well | 2:19:51 | 2:19:54 | |
as quite a brisk wind so here it
will feel cold and some of those | 2:19:54 | 2:19:58 | |
showers will have hailed plus some
sleep in them. But not in Northern | 2:19:58 | 2:20:02 | |
Ireland, showers fading there is the
afternoon but the cloud building to | 2:20:02 | 2:20:05 | |
the west -- plus they will have some
sleet in them. North-west England | 2:20:05 | 2:20:18 | |
prone to the remnants of the
showers. Not as intense this morning | 2:20:18 | 2:20:23 | |
and many will miss them, Sun in the
Midlands, East Anglia, Kent, and all | 2:20:23 | 2:20:30 | |
the way over towards the south-west
for you might find the odd shower | 2:20:30 | 2:20:36 | |
but that'll be the exception rather
than the rule. Through the evening | 2:20:36 | 2:20:40 | |
and overnight we have a front coming
in from the west introducing a band | 2:20:40 | 2:20:44 | |
of rain and hill snow across
Northern Ireland, southern England | 2:20:44 | 2:20:49 | |
and North Wales. There will also be
Hill store across Scotland but that | 2:20:49 | 2:20:53 | |
more modest levels down to about 250
metres where it will settle by | 2:20:53 | 2:20:57 | |
tomorrow morning. The heaviest rain
will be across south-west England | 2:20:57 | 2:21:03 | |
and as it advances eastward we could
see some sleet first thing tomorrow | 2:21:03 | 2:21:07 | |
for example in the Midlands. Cold
and looking at the risk of ice on | 2:21:07 | 2:21:13 | |
untreated surfaces. This is the
culprit, bringing that combination, | 2:21:13 | 2:21:19 | |
moving from the west, then
retreating back towards the West. | 2:21:19 | 2:21:23 | |
Eastern areas starting off cold, and
bright, as this band of rain, sleet | 2:21:23 | 2:21:28 | |
and hill snow moves steadily over
towards the east and retreats and | 2:21:28 | 2:21:32 | |
starts to come back towards the
West. So it will brighten up the | 2:21:32 | 2:21:37 | |
showers in Northern Ireland when the
rain comes back to you and then it | 2:21:37 | 2:21:40 | |
will brighten up in eastern England
as the wrinkles away. On Sunday -- | 2:21:40 | 2:21:45 | |
as the rain moves away. Big E
north-easterly wind from the North | 2:21:45 | 2:21:51 | |
Sea which will feel better. It also
drag and a lot of cloud and parts of | 2:21:51 | 2:21:55 | |
the Southeast will see some wintry
showers. We would all see them. The | 2:21:55 | 2:22:00 | |
brightest conditions across western
Scotland and also the West of | 2:22:00 | 2:22:03 | |
Northern Ireland but we are not
finished yet with the snow. It will | 2:22:03 | 2:22:06 | |
continue to be cold next week and we
think some of us will see snow at | 2:22:06 | 2:22:10 | |
this stage on Monday and again on
Thursday. Keep in touch with your | 2:22:10 | 2:22:13 | |
forecast. Back to you, Naga and
Charlie. Carol, thank you very much. | 2:22:13 | 2:22:24 | |
In the UK, for every two statues
of women who represent | 2:22:24 | 2:22:27 | |
significant moments in history
there are five for men. | 2:22:27 | 2:22:29 | |
This may be about to change,
starting with three inspirational | 2:22:29 | 2:22:32 | |
women who spearheaded
the suffragette movement. | 2:22:32 | 2:22:33 | |
Breakfast's Jayne McCubbin has
been to find out more. | 2:22:33 | 2:22:39 | |
Soon to be immortalised,
three women who fought for all women | 2:22:39 | 2:22:42 | |
to rise up and claim their vote. | 2:22:42 | 2:22:47 | |
Perhaps the most famous among them,
Emmeline Pankhurst. | 2:22:47 | 2:22:50 | |
I wanted Emmeline as the courageous,
dignified, determined activist. | 2:22:50 | 2:22:52 | |
Emmeline's fight began
right here in Manchester. | 2:22:52 | 2:22:59 | |
This very room. | 2:22:59 | 2:23:04 | |
Here, the suffragette
movement was born, and here, | 2:23:04 | 2:23:06 | |
in December, Emmeline will return. | 2:23:06 | 2:23:10 | |
Suffragettes were on the streets,
ringing bells, summoning people out | 2:23:10 | 2:23:12 | |
of their homes. | 2:23:12 | 2:23:15 | |
Somebody grabs a kitchen chair
as a makeshift rostrum | 2:23:15 | 2:23:19 | |
and the five-foot
Emmeline climbs atop. | 2:23:19 | 2:23:26 | |
"Enough is enough", you know,
"Time for deeds, not words". | 2:23:26 | 2:23:29 | |
This was the message which inspired
women up and down the country - | 2:23:29 | 2:23:32 | |
ordinary women like Alice Hawkins
in Leicester, a mother of six | 2:23:32 | 2:23:35 | |
who worked in a shoe factory. | 2:23:35 | 2:23:38 | |
That's what drove Alice forward -
she wanted equal pay and the vote | 2:23:38 | 2:23:41 | |
was the route to getting that. | 2:23:41 | 2:23:45 | |
Everybody that went on a hunger
strike got one of these? | 2:23:45 | 2:23:49 | |
From 1909. | 2:23:49 | 2:23:50 | |
Absolutely right. | 2:23:50 | 2:23:51 | |
Five times, their
great-grandmother was jailed. | 2:23:51 | 2:23:53 | |
They still have her hunger strike
medal, her prison badge, | 2:23:53 | 2:23:55 | |
the sash she wore on every protest. | 2:23:55 | 2:23:58 | |
But never before spending days
baking in the kitchen, | 2:23:58 | 2:24:00 | |
making sure her family would be fed
if she were arrested. | 2:24:00 | 2:24:04 | |
If they were going to protest,
where was a chance to be arrested - | 2:24:04 | 2:24:07 | |
not only arrested but imprisoned -
and so, they anticipated that | 2:24:07 | 2:24:10 | |
by making sure the home
could manage without them. | 2:24:10 | 2:24:13 | |
That's amazing, isn't it? | 2:24:13 | 2:24:15 | |
Yeah, well, that's what she did. | 2:24:15 | 2:24:18 | |
Aren't women great, eh? | 2:24:18 | 2:24:20 | |
They are! | 2:24:20 | 2:24:21 | |
Aren't women flipping great? | 2:24:21 | 2:24:22 | |
Yeah, yeah. | 2:24:22 | 2:24:23 | |
So practical! | 2:24:23 | 2:24:24 | |
Alice knew her duty to women
and family, and on Sunday, | 2:24:24 | 2:24:31 | |
Leicester will pay their respects
as her statue is finally unveiled. | 2:24:31 | 2:24:33 | |
She was one of many women who risked
everything to fight for the right | 2:24:33 | 2:24:39 | |
to shape what happened here,
but 100 years on women | 2:24:39 | 2:24:44 | |
are still under-represented -
not just in Parliament | 2:24:44 | 2:24:46 | |
but in Parliament Square. | 2:24:46 | 2:24:47 | |
All the statues here are of men. | 2:24:47 | 2:24:50 | |
Where are the women? | 2:24:50 | 2:24:51 | |
And I couldn't believe it. | 2:24:51 | 2:24:54 | |
A campaign by Caroline will finally
pay off next year when a statue | 2:24:54 | 2:24:57 | |
will honour Millicent Fawcett,
the woman who set up | 2:24:57 | 2:25:00 | |
the National Union of
Women Suffrage Societies. | 2:25:00 | 2:25:02 | |
It's been 100 years on the sixth
of February since the first women | 2:25:02 | 2:25:06 | |
won the right to vote,
and it is shocking, really, | 2:25:06 | 2:25:09 | |
but it's taken 100 years for us
to get a statue of one of the women | 2:25:09 | 2:25:15 | |
who fought so hard for that right
here in Parliament Square, and I'm | 2:25:15 | 2:25:18 | |
delighted that Millicent Fawcett
is going to be joining the ranks | 2:25:18 | 2:25:21 | |
of these august men and I hope
she's the first of many. | 2:25:21 | 2:25:23 | |
This is what they fought for. | 2:25:23 | 2:25:25 | |
Millicent died a few days
after the vote was extended | 2:25:25 | 2:25:27 | |
to all women. | 2:25:27 | 2:25:28 | |
Emmaline never lived to see the day. | 2:25:28 | 2:25:31 | |
Alice lived to vote
in eight general elections. | 2:25:31 | 2:25:33 | |
Hopefully, through seeing the statue
in the centre of Leicester, | 2:25:33 | 2:25:36 | |
it will encourage young people
to hopefully exercise | 2:25:36 | 2:25:37 | |
their right to vote. | 2:25:37 | 2:25:40 | |
I really do feel that. | 2:25:40 | 2:25:42 | |
An incredible legacy which lives on. | 2:25:42 | 2:25:50 | |
And we have an insight into how
statues are put together as well! | 2:25:52 | 2:25:57 | |
You're watching Breakfast. | 2:25:57 | 2:26:02 | |
Let's show you what's | 2:26:02 | 2:26:03 | |
Let's show you what's coming a
little later on. Let's show your | 2:26:03 | 2:26:06 | |
picture from downstairs. This is a
little replica of BBC Breakfast | 2:26:06 | 2:26:12 | |
sofa, and look at | 2:26:12 | 2:26:17 | |
this master of keepie-uppie! He is
going to go to Everest base camp | 2:26:24 | 2:26:28 | |
while doing his keepie-uppie. So
he's going to come upstairs, I | 2:26:28 | 2:26:36 | |
wonder they will keep doing this up
the stairs. All of these moves look | 2:26:36 | 2:26:41 | |
at that, impressive! Charlie, you
have been teaching him your skills, | 2:26:41 | 2:26:46 | |
I can see, and one thing I learned
about this, because it could be | 2:26:46 | 2:26:50 | |
quite wet when he makes his way to
Everest base camp, special | 2:26:50 | 2:26:56 | |
waterproof gritty shoes, who knew!
We will see that a little bit later | 2:26:56 | 2:26:59 | |
on. | 2:26:59 | 2:30:20 | |
Now though it's back
to Charley and Naga. | 2:30:20 | 2:30:23 | |
Hello, this is Breakfast with
Charlie Stayt and Naga Munchetty. | 2:30:27 | 2:30:34 | |
The number of men dying
from prostate cancer overtakes | 2:30:34 | 2:30:37 | |
the number of women killed by breast
cancer for the first time. | 2:30:37 | 2:30:45 | |
The charity Prostate Cancer UK say
advances in treatments have now paid | 2:30:50 | 2:30:55 | |
off. | 2:30:55 | 2:30:57 | |
It really is time to actually get
behind this and to realise | 2:30:57 | 2:31:00 | |
that we need to get
on top of it now because | 2:31:00 | 2:31:02 | |
it is just going to become more
common and it will kill more | 2:31:02 | 2:31:05 | |
men if we aren't able to do that. | 2:31:05 | 2:31:07 | |
Health leaders have written to the
Justice Secretary urging him to | 2:31:07 | 2:31:12 | |
reform the pay-out system for
negligence claims against the NHS. | 2:31:12 | 2:31:16 | |
They say the NHS would have to pay
up to £65 billion of all current | 2:31:16 | 2:31:20 | |
claims were successful, double the
amount three years ago. The | 2:31:20 | 2:31:23 | |
government says it is looking at
measures to control costs in some | 2:31:23 | 2:31:27 | |
cases. | 2:31:27 | 2:31:29 | |
Today's the final day
of Theresa May's visit to China - | 2:31:29 | 2:31:32 | |
and in an interview with the BBC,
she's insisted | 2:31:32 | 2:31:34 | |
she's delivering what the British
people want on Brexit, | 2:31:34 | 2:31:36 | |
despite persistent criticism
from within her own party. | 2:31:36 | 2:31:38 | |
Speaking to the BBC's political
editor Laura Kuenssberg, | 2:31:38 | 2:31:40 | |
Theresa May insisted she's setting
out a clear vision to | 2:31:40 | 2:31:42 | |
the rest of the world. | 2:31:42 | 2:31:44 | |
It is important that we deliver
what people want, which is control | 2:31:44 | 2:31:47 | |
of our money, our
borders and our laws. | 2:31:47 | 2:31:49 | |
It's exactly what we are doing. | 2:31:49 | 2:31:51 | |
What I am showing in China is how
we can ensure that we actually | 2:31:51 | 2:31:54 | |
enhance our trade with the rest
of the world as well. | 2:31:54 | 2:31:57 | |
Why do we want to do that? | 2:31:57 | 2:31:58 | |
It is good for people in Britain,
it's good for jobs in Britain. | 2:31:58 | 2:32:01 | |
Prime Minister, can you stay on? | 2:32:01 | 2:32:03 | |
Because people are asking you again
and again to be clearer | 2:32:03 | 2:32:05 | |
about your priorities. | 2:32:05 | 2:32:06 | |
How long can you stay
on, do you believe? | 2:32:06 | 2:32:09 | |
Well, let's be very clear about this
- I've set out what my vision is. | 2:32:09 | 2:32:12 | |
I have set out and I have said
to people that at every stage | 2:32:12 | 2:32:16 | |
where we can fill in
the detail, we will do so, | 2:32:16 | 2:32:18 | |
and that is exactly... | 2:32:18 | 2:32:19 | |
But how long can you stay on? | 2:32:19 | 2:32:21 | |
The idea that we have to have -
that we are about to complete | 2:32:21 | 2:32:24 | |
the negotiation with
the European Union on our future | 2:32:24 | 2:32:26 | |
relationship is wrong. | 2:32:26 | 2:32:28 | |
We are just at the beginning
of the process of negotiating | 2:32:28 | 2:32:31 | |
with the European Union. | 2:32:31 | 2:32:33 | |
So we will be out there ensuring
that the deal we get delivers | 2:32:33 | 2:32:36 | |
on what the British people want. | 2:32:36 | 2:32:38 | |
That's what this is about. | 2:32:38 | 2:32:40 | |
And I know that what the British
people want as well is good jobs | 2:32:40 | 2:32:44 | |
for themselves and their children,
and that is why it is important | 2:32:44 | 2:32:47 | |
for me to be here in China
where businesses have been signing | 2:32:47 | 2:32:50 | |
deals, selling more UK products,
great UK products, into China, | 2:32:50 | 2:32:52 | |
ensuring there are more jobs
for people in the UK. | 2:32:52 | 2:32:55 | |
Do you want to be the Tory leader
at the next general election? | 2:32:55 | 2:32:58 | |
Well, I have been asked this
on a number of occasions. | 2:32:58 | 2:33:01 | |
I've said very clearly
throughout my political career | 2:33:01 | 2:33:04 | |
I have served my country
and I have served my party. | 2:33:04 | 2:33:07 | |
I am not a quitter. | 2:33:07 | 2:33:10 | |
I am in this because there
is a job to be done here, | 2:33:10 | 2:33:13 | |
and that's delivering the British
people and doing that in a way that | 2:33:13 | 2:33:16 | |
ensures the future
prosperity of our country. | 2:33:16 | 2:33:19 | |
Global Britain, global
Britain is a real vision | 2:33:19 | 2:33:21 | |
for the United Kingdom. | 2:33:21 | 2:33:23 | |
I want the British people to see
a Government that is delivering | 2:33:23 | 2:33:26 | |
for them around the world,
and that is exactly | 2:33:26 | 2:33:28 | |
what we are doing. | 2:33:28 | 2:33:30 | |
Our viewers see day
after day the Tory Party | 2:33:30 | 2:33:32 | |
fighting amongst themselves. | 2:33:32 | 2:33:33 | |
How do you reassert your authority? | 2:33:33 | 2:33:37 | |
I am doing with the British people
want, which is delivering on Brexit | 2:33:37 | 2:33:40 | |
but also getting out around
the world ensuring that we bring | 2:33:40 | 2:33:42 | |
jobs back to Britain. | 2:33:42 | 2:33:45 | |
Companies will be selling more great
British products to China | 2:33:45 | 2:33:48 | |
as a result of this trip. | 2:33:48 | 2:33:50 | |
There will be more people in jobs
in the UK as a result of this trip. | 2:33:50 | 2:33:54 | |
That's global Britain in action. | 2:33:54 | 2:33:55 | |
Prime Minister, thank you very much. | 2:33:55 | 2:33:57 | |
Thank you. | 2:33:57 | 2:34:02 | |
Police investigating
the death of Hollywood star | 2:34:02 | 2:34:03 | |
Natalie Wood 37 years ago,
say her husband Robert Wagner | 2:34:03 | 2:34:06 | |
is now being treated
as a "person of interest". | 2:34:06 | 2:34:10 | |
The actress was found dead
after going missing from a yacht | 2:34:10 | 2:34:13 | |
off the coast of California. | 2:34:13 | 2:34:15 | |
Police have not declared the death
a murder and no charges have been | 2:34:15 | 2:34:19 | |
filed against Mr Wagner. | 2:34:19 | 2:34:20 | |
He is now 87-years-old
and has not commented | 2:34:20 | 2:34:22 | |
on the latest developments. | 2:34:22 | 2:34:25 | |
The Government is facing criticism
for failing to implement adequate | 2:34:25 | 2:34:27 | |
safeguards for children online. | 2:34:27 | 2:34:30 | |
In 2008, the Byron Review,
commissioned by Gordon Brown, | 2:34:30 | 2:34:32 | |
put forward 38 recommendations
on internet safety. | 2:34:32 | 2:34:35 | |
The NSPCC says fewer than half have
been properly implemented. | 2:34:35 | 2:34:40 | |
Ministers say they are planning
a voluntary code as part | 2:34:40 | 2:34:42 | |
of their forthcoming Internet Safety
Strategy. | 2:34:42 | 2:34:50 | |
Speaking earlier on Breakfast, Tanya
Byron who wrote the report back in | 2:34:51 | 2:34:56 | |
2008, said tech companies should do
more. These are huge companies who | 2:34:56 | 2:35:00 | |
make billions and billions in
profit, who have the technology to | 2:35:00 | 2:35:06 | |
target information to users, who
have we understand a backlog of | 2:35:06 | 2:35:09 | |
child endangerment reports, who have
had ten years to create their own | 2:35:09 | 2:35:13 | |
code and make that transparent to
the public. They have not done it. | 2:35:13 | 2:35:19 | |
Health experts are calling
on the government to fully fund IVF | 2:35:19 | 2:35:22 | |
treatment to help cut the number
of multiple pregnancies that | 2:35:22 | 2:35:24 | |
are risky for mothers and babies. | 2:35:24 | 2:35:26 | |
The Royal College of Obstetricians
and Gynaecologists says the health | 2:35:26 | 2:35:28 | |
and financial burden these
pregnancies pose on the NHS | 2:35:28 | 2:35:30 | |
can't be overstated. | 2:35:30 | 2:35:35 | |
Prince Harry and Meghan Markle
presented awards at an event last | 2:35:35 | 2:35:38 | |
night, celebrating the achievements
of wounded, injured and sick service | 2:35:38 | 2:35:43 | |
men and women. Ms Markle's
experience in the spotlight came in | 2:35:43 | 2:35:51 | |
handy as there was a moment when the
envelopes got mixed up. It was all | 2:35:51 | 2:35:56 | |
sorted out. A | 2:35:56 | 2:36:01 | |
sorted out. A little bit of a
shuffle and it is done. Those | 2:36:02 | 2:36:04 | |
charities are very close to Prince
Harry's heart. | 2:36:04 | 2:36:07 | |
As we reported earlier in the week
France's heaviest rainfall in 50 | 2:36:07 | 2:36:10 | |
years led to flooding in central
Paris and although waters | 2:36:10 | 2:36:13 | |
levels peaked on Monday,
some suburbs are still underwater. | 2:36:13 | 2:36:19 | |
While the floods have
caused misery for some - | 2:36:19 | 2:36:22 | |
with dozens evacuated
from their homes - | 2:36:22 | 2:36:25 | |
these wakeboarders took
the opportunity to practice just | 2:36:25 | 2:36:26 | |
outside their house
in a suburb of the capital. | 2:36:26 | 2:36:33 | |
The River Seine has risen
about six metres above normal | 2:36:33 | 2:36:36 | |
for this time of year. | 2:36:36 | 2:36:44 | |
Fabulous, why not take the
opportunity? There is loads coming | 2:36:44 | 2:36:49 | |
up on Breakfast this morning. | 2:36:49 | 2:36:53 | |
For many, suffering a stroke
is a traumatic enough - | 2:36:53 | 2:36:55 | |
but the recovery can be
even more difficult. | 2:36:55 | 2:36:57 | |
We'll hear how Richard Gray's
battled to recover from | 2:36:57 | 2:37:00 | |
a life-changing stroke
four years ago. | 2:37:00 | 2:37:02 | |
And this magnificent
specimen is the UK's entry | 2:37:02 | 2:37:04 | |
for European Tree of the Year. | 2:37:04 | 2:37:07 | |
We'll tell you why it means
so much to so many people. | 2:37:07 | 2:37:15 | |
And after nine, he might be one
of the biggest names in opera, | 2:37:27 | 2:37:30 | |
but Joseph Calleja will be
here to tell us why he could have | 2:37:30 | 2:37:34 | |
been top of the heavy
metal charts instead. | 2:37:34 | 2:37:35 | |
All that still to come. | 2:37:35 | 2:37:38 | |
There is something about opera that
gets you going. | 2:37:38 | 2:37:41 | |
As soon as you heard they operate
you both that up. It was lessened | 2:37:41 | 2:37:47 | |
Dormer that really centred its place
in sport. It is a huge rows and | 2:37:47 | 2:37:55 | |
song. John Farnworth, the
record-breaking keepy-uppy star, he | 2:37:55 | 2:38:00 | |
has been in the Plaza, we saw him in
reception earlier and we understand | 2:38:00 | 2:38:04 | |
at the moment he is coming up in the
lifts. Hopefully, he will be out of | 2:38:04 | 2:38:09 | |
the lift any moment. Oh, there he
is, he is not far away. That is | 2:38:09 | 2:38:15 | |
quite a pace. He is trying to set a
world record for going up to base | 2:38:15 | 2:38:22 | |
camp Everest. It is nearly 40 miles.
It is about 50 yards between where | 2:38:22 | 2:38:27 | |
he is now and our studio. I hope he
does not get it over the balcony! | 2:38:27 | 2:38:32 | |
Due to modern technology we can keep
an eye on him and his progress | 2:38:32 | 2:38:36 | |
during this sports bulletin. You can
follow John and we will look at what | 2:38:36 | 2:38:42 | |
the worst thing can happen in the
full contact version of football. | 2:38:42 | 2:38:51 | |
Phil Neville's week does not get any
easier. | 2:38:51 | 2:38:56 | |
He was at Kingsmeadow,
to cast an eye over Chelsea and | 2:38:56 | 2:38:59 | |
Manchester City's England players. | 2:38:59 | 2:39:00 | |
And with World Cup qualifiers coming
up, he wouldn't have wanted | 2:39:00 | 2:39:02 | |
to see his England goalkeeper
Karen Bardsley, being stretchered | 2:39:02 | 2:39:04 | |
off, after falling heavily
on her shoulder in just the second | 2:39:04 | 2:39:07 | |
minute of the match. | 2:39:07 | 2:39:08 | |
The game was held up for nine
minutes while she was | 2:39:08 | 2:39:11 | |
treated on the pitch. | 2:39:11 | 2:39:12 | |
The game ended 0-0. | 2:39:12 | 2:39:13 | |
She's gone off to
hospital to be checked. | 2:39:13 | 2:39:15 | |
She's got a bit of pain
in her arm and shoulders. | 2:39:15 | 2:39:17 | |
But she's talking and she seems OK
and in good spirits. | 2:39:17 | 2:39:20 | |
So we'll trust the medical team
to carry on with it now. | 2:39:20 | 2:39:25 | |
It meant just a week
after 18-year-old Ellie Roebuck, | 2:39:25 | 2:39:27 | |
signed a professional contract,
she got her chance in goal | 2:39:27 | 2:39:29 | |
and pulled off some great saves,
keeping a clean sheet. | 2:39:29 | 2:39:33 | |
These were the pictures she tweeted
upon signing that contract. | 2:39:33 | 2:39:40 | |
The Super League season got back
under way last night, | 2:39:40 | 2:39:42 | |
with wins for Hull FC
and the champions Leeds. | 2:39:42 | 2:39:44 | |
It was certainly "labour intensive"
for Warrington skipper Chris Hill, | 2:39:44 | 2:39:46 | |
seen here on the left. | 2:39:46 | 2:39:48 | |
He had to leave his midway
through the 16-12 loss to Leeds, | 2:39:48 | 2:39:54 | |
leaving his team temporarily down
to 12 men, because his | 2:39:54 | 2:39:57 | |
wife went into labour! | 2:39:57 | 2:39:58 | |
He missed a great try
from Leeds' Ryan Hall, | 2:39:58 | 2:40:00 | |
although Hill had more important
things to worry about last night. | 2:40:00 | 2:40:08 | |
I have tweeted him but he has a lot
of things to concentrate on. Maybe | 2:40:08 | 2:40:16 | |
they are getting some well earned
rest now. | 2:40:16 | 2:40:19 | |
Kyle Edmund is set to miss
Great Britain's Davis Cup tie | 2:40:19 | 2:40:22 | |
against Spain, which gets
under way today. | 2:40:22 | 2:40:23 | |
He developed a hip injury
during last week's Australian Open | 2:40:23 | 2:40:26 | |
semifinal defeat by Marin Cilic
and wasn't able to | 2:40:26 | 2:40:28 | |
get over it in time. | 2:40:28 | 2:40:29 | |
He's in Marbella to support his team
mates though and could be drafted | 2:40:29 | 2:40:32 | |
in to play should his
injury situation improve. | 2:40:32 | 2:40:40 | |
It is a huge weekend of crunch and
tackles. We have the Six Nations | 2:40:42 | 2:40:47 | |
starting tomorrow. On Sunday night
it is the Super Bowl as the | 2:40:47 | 2:40:51 | |
Philadelphia Eagles take on the New
England Patriots for the right to be | 2:40:51 | 2:40:56 | |
American football champions. You can
watch it including the famous Super | 2:40:56 | 2:41:00 | |
Bowl half-time show. Last year, Lady
Gaga put on a stunning performance. | 2:41:00 | 2:41:08 | |
Justin Timberlake has a lot to live
up to. He has the half-time show in | 2:41:08 | 2:41:13 | |
Minnesota. He was asked what
inspired him to take on the | 2:41:13 | 2:41:17 | |
challenge. | 2:41:17 | 2:41:18 | |
What was my inspiration? | 2:41:18 | 2:41:20 | |
Yeah. | 2:41:20 | 2:41:21 | |
So, I got this phone call, right. | 2:41:21 | 2:41:23 | |
OK. | 2:41:23 | 2:41:24 | |
And they were, like, would you come
and do the half-time show? | 2:41:24 | 2:41:27 | |
And I was like, yeah. | 2:41:27 | 2:41:28 | |
That was it. | 2:41:28 | 2:41:29 | |
I'm just excited. | 2:41:29 | 2:41:32 | |
My band is Tennessee
kids, I feel like those, | 2:41:32 | 2:41:34 | |
they're my special guests and I'm
excited this year to rock the stage. | 2:41:34 | 2:41:37 | |
So it's going to be a lot of fun. | 2:41:37 | 2:41:45 | |
You may remember the last time
Justin Timberlake was involved | 2:41:45 | 2:41:48 | |
in the Super Bowl's half time
coverage there was that very | 2:41:48 | 2:41:50 | |
unfortunate Janet Jackson wardrobe
malfunction incident, in 2004. | 2:41:50 | 2:41:58 | |
A long time ago. It does not seem
that long ago! | 2:41:58 | 2:42:03 | |
And there's coverage
of the Super Bowl between | 2:42:03 | 2:42:05 | |
the New England Patriots
and the Philadelphia Eagles live | 2:42:05 | 2:42:07 | |
on BBC One and on the Red Button
from 11:15pm on Sunday night. | 2:42:07 | 2:42:10 | |
Well worth staying up for. We will
find out where our record-breaking | 2:42:10 | 2:42:20 | |
freestyler is. He is waltzing into
the studio now. There are a lot of | 2:42:20 | 2:42:27 | |
cables to step over. This is health
and safety going mad. | 2:42:27 | 2:42:35 | |
You are fresh from going up Snowdon
in preparation for Everest. Just | 2:42:36 | 2:42:40 | |
tell us how long you have been doing
this for. I had been training for a | 2:42:40 | 2:42:44 | |
long time and my aim is to get to
Everest base camp and then above | 2:42:44 | 2:42:47 | |
that. I have been doing strength
work and went up Snowdon last week. | 2:42:47 | 2:42:51 | |
I have been putting in the hours
that I will have to do ten days | 2:42:51 | 2:42:56 | |
straight trekking with the ball up
mountains and down steps. What does | 2:42:56 | 2:43:03 | |
the training involves? In terms of
strength training? Does a lot of | 2:43:03 | 2:43:06 | |
work with the ball. I have been
working with weights on my back and | 2:43:06 | 2:43:13 | |
different weight lifting techniques
like squats, deadlifts. My whole | 2:43:13 | 2:43:17 | |
strength has improved that I have
had to change my diet and the way I | 2:43:17 | 2:43:21 | |
schedule my life. I have learned a
lot from it so far. You are having | 2:43:21 | 2:43:25 | |
to step up at the same time as
keeping the ball in the air? Yes, it | 2:43:25 | 2:43:31 | |
is like a new technique I have had
to learn. Usually I am static. It is | 2:43:31 | 2:43:36 | |
this type of thing juggling the ball
and trying not to let the ball drop | 2:43:36 | 2:43:40 | |
which I am pretty good at. But when
you have got weights on your back | 2:43:40 | 2:43:48 | |
and I have had a few slips along the
way, but all in all I feel good. I | 2:43:48 | 2:43:52 | |
am tired at the minute but I am on a
slight wind down to prepare for the | 2:43:52 | 2:43:55 | |
big one. Can we see the pictures of
you going up Snowdon again. We got | 2:43:55 | 2:44:01 | |
very anxious about health and safety
about you coming in here! And there | 2:44:01 | 2:44:07 | |
you are, you are going up uncharted
territory. You do not know exactly | 2:44:07 | 2:44:12 | |
the route, do you? You have to deal
with whatever happens. I am lucky | 2:44:12 | 2:44:16 | |
with my friend who is coming with
me, Danny. He has been guiding me. I | 2:44:16 | 2:44:21 | |
am not going to lie, I have fallen
so many times. I lost my footing. | 2:44:21 | 2:44:26 | |
And one time we had to turn back
because there was sheet ice. You | 2:44:26 | 2:44:31 | |
know there is a train! I should not
have said that! | 2:44:31 | 2:44:35 | |
In terms of technical, you are
obviously going for a record | 2:44:35 | 2:44:40 | |
attempt, are you allowed to drop the
ball? Know, if you do a record, that | 2:44:40 | 2:44:46 | |
is part of the rules. It will likely
be the furthest distance travelled | 2:44:46 | 2:44:52 | |
so I will keep the ball in the air.
Hopefully we can get an adjudication | 2:44:52 | 2:44:58 | |
around it so we will have certain
parameters. Sometimes I might be | 2:44:58 | 2:45:02 | |
able to use my head or my shoulders.
I would really like to use my feet | 2:45:02 | 2:45:06 | |
because when I have the ball at my
feet I can see the ground and I can | 2:45:06 | 2:45:10 | |
sometimes keep the ball a little bit
higher so I can see what is ahead of | 2:45:10 | 2:45:14 | |
me. How long do you think you will
be able to travel at altitude | 2:45:14 | 2:45:19 | |
keeping the ball up? Philly the
longest trek today will be 10K. You | 2:45:19 | 2:45:24 | |
think you can do that without
dropping the ball? I have done it in | 2:45:24 | 2:45:31 | |
training and with weights on my back
up the cells where I live in | 2:45:31 | 2:45:34 | |
Lancashire. | 2:45:34 | 2:45:39 | |
But the danger is that in the
mountain, it will just go off the | 2:45:39 | 2:45:43 | |
side, we've met and we put it into
the River Thames! Your face was a | 2:45:43 | 2:45:48 | |
picture. If it goes off the
mountain, you cannot get it. I know, | 2:45:48 | 2:45:52 | |
we had a few near misses in Snowdon.
I went with my friends, and they | 2:45:52 | 2:45:57 | |
said, I knew the best route, they
took me on the hardest route. I | 2:45:57 | 2:46:00 | |
would literally climbing with the
ball. But I need to get used to | 2:46:00 | 2:46:06 | |
that. A technicality, you can do
that thing where you bounce that | 2:46:06 | 2:46:09 | |
ball on the back of your neck, how
long are you allowed to do that for? | 2:46:09 | 2:46:13 | |
You cannot walk along with the ball
perched on your shoulder. When I was | 2:46:13 | 2:46:18 | |
doing Snowdon, I did 80% on my feet
and the rest, occasionally I would | 2:46:18 | 2:46:22 | |
have the ball balanced on the side
of my head, jumping up to the next | 2:46:22 | 2:46:26 | |
bit I would have it on my neck, and
pick it up. Can you do that now? I | 2:46:26 | 2:46:33 | |
can put the ball here, here and put
it down. Even in the confines of | 2:46:33 | 2:46:38 | |
this tiny area. We wish you all the
best. We go out on the 22nd, 20 days | 2:46:38 | 2:46:46 | |
until we go. I'm excited, I'm
nervous. But I'm well opt for the | 2:46:46 | 2:46:52 | |
challenge. We will follow your
progress with interest. | 2:46:52 | 2:46:56 | |
Carol, can you top that? | 2:46:56 | 2:46:59 | |
In a word, no! This | 2:46:59 | 2:47:02 | |
In a word, no! This morning, a
chilly start of the day, we don't | 2:47:02 | 2:47:05 | |
have the strong wind we had
yesterday, said although it's cold | 2:47:05 | 2:47:10 | |
outside it will not feel as raw as
it did. These are the temperatures | 2:47:10 | 2:47:15 | |
at the moment. A little bit higher
in St Mary. There's a lot of dry | 2:47:15 | 2:47:24 | |
weather around, showers draped
across the West, the north and the | 2:47:24 | 2:47:26 | |
East. In the east, they will tend to
be a bit heavier at times and also | 2:47:26 | 2:47:33 | |
we will see some hail and sleet.
Through the day, many of the showers | 2:47:33 | 2:47:37 | |
especially in the north and west
will tend to fade. For Northern | 2:47:37 | 2:47:41 | |
Ireland, a fine afternoon and day in
prospect, but later the cloud will | 2:47:41 | 2:47:45 | |
build into the West. A lot of dry
and sunny weather across Scotland to | 2:47:45 | 2:47:53 | |
the peppering of showers in the
north-east. The north of England has | 2:47:53 | 2:47:56 | |
a fine day, cold at present. The
Northeast and East Coast of England, | 2:47:56 | 2:48:00 | |
there will be a few showers left,
not as many as we have at the moment | 2:48:00 | 2:48:07 | |
but not as heavy. A lot of dry
weather, sunny skies and bright | 2:48:07 | 2:48:10 | |
spells across the Midlands and the
Isle of Wight and off towards the | 2:48:10 | 2:48:14 | |
south-west. Here, we could see the
odd shower through the afternoon as | 2:48:14 | 2:48:18 | |
we could across Wales, but foremost,
it will be cold with sunshine. | 2:48:18 | 2:48:24 | |
Through the evening and overnight, a
new weather front coming our way | 2:48:24 | 2:48:27 | |
from the West coming through will
bring rain and hail snow across | 2:48:27 | 2:48:32 | |
Northern Ireland, North wealth and
northern England. In Scotland, the | 2:48:32 | 2:48:34 | |
level will be lower. Down to about
250 metres. One to three centimetres | 2:48:34 | 2:48:41 | |
lying by the end of the night. The
heaviest rain will be across the | 2:48:41 | 2:48:45 | |
south-west of England and as the
front pushes towards the East, it | 2:48:45 | 2:48:49 | |
will bring some sleet across the
Midlands, possibly. So watch out for | 2:48:49 | 2:48:54 | |
icy patches on untreated services
tomorrow. We have got the front | 2:48:54 | 2:48:59 | |
moving towards the east but during
the day it will turn around and come | 2:48:59 | 2:49:04 | |
back towards the West. So many
eastern areas will stay dry, | 2:49:04 | 2:49:08 | |
starting off on a bright note. As
the front advances towards the east, | 2:49:08 | 2:49:12 | |
it will cloud over and brighten up
behind it in Northern Ireland. But | 2:49:12 | 2:49:16 | |
with some blustery showers. And then
it starts to retreat back towards | 2:49:16 | 2:49:21 | |
the West, so rain later in the day
across Northern Ireland and it will | 2:49:21 | 2:49:25 | |
brighten up in the East. It will
still feel cold. But not as cold as | 2:49:25 | 2:49:29 | |
it's going to feel on Sunday. Achim
north-easterly wind will drag in | 2:49:29 | 2:49:33 | |
cloud from the north the -- there
will be Achim north-easterly wind. | 2:49:33 | 2:49:38 | |
Showers in in the south-east. Into
the new week, it will remain cold | 2:49:38 | 2:49:48 | |
and some of us will see | 2:49:48 | 2:49:52 | |
the new week, it will remain cold
and some of us will some snow. | 2:49:52 | 2:49:54 | |
Have a lovely weekend, | 2:49:54 | 2:49:56 | |
and some of us will some snow.
Have a lovely weekend, Carol. | 2:49:56 | 2:49:57 | |
So, we have been struggling with
giant figures, today. The numbers | 2:50:02 | 2:50:07 | |
coming in from Apple mainly?
Extraordinary figures. | 2:50:07 | 2:50:12 | |
Yes, it is your grey, it easy to
bang the around figures like £14 | 2:50:12 | 2:50:16 | |
billion but -- it is extraordinary.
That's how much Apple has made in | 2:50:16 | 2:50:20 | |
just three months. A lot of
technology firms have been | 2:50:20 | 2:50:24 | |
reporting. | 2:50:24 | 2:50:24 | |
They're a big part of a daily lives
and they're big business too. | 2:50:24 | 2:50:27 | |
First up, Apple has sold fewer
new iPhones in the last year | 2:50:27 | 2:50:30 | |
but that didn't stop the tech giant
posting a record profit | 2:50:30 | 2:50:33 | |
of over £14 billion. | 2:50:33 | 2:50:34 | |
That's the largest profit ever made
by a company in three months. | 2:50:34 | 2:50:38 | |
All of that down to its new iPhone X
that costs you nearly £1,000. | 2:50:38 | 2:50:46 | |
They did say that some of the sales
are falling, but they are still | 2:50:48 | 2:50:51 | |
selling a lot of them. | 2:50:51 | 2:50:53 | |
Online retail giant Amazon saw sales
jump by a third last year, | 2:50:53 | 2:50:56 | |
that made them over £120
billion in sales and boost | 2:50:56 | 2:50:59 | |
profits by over 30%. | 2:50:59 | 2:51:00 | |
They had a great Christmas
but subscribers to their Prime | 2:51:00 | 2:51:02 | |
and cloud services gave them
a big boost. | 2:51:02 | 2:51:08 | |
And film and TV firm Netflix signed
up an impressive 8.3m | 2:51:08 | 2:51:12 | |
new subscribers to their streaming
service at the end of last year | 2:51:12 | 2:51:16 | |
despite upping their prices. | 2:51:16 | 2:51:23 | |
A big threat to the traditional TV
firms. | 2:51:24 | 2:51:26 | |
And finally, you might wonder why
I'm dressed like this? | 2:51:26 | 2:51:29 | |
Well, it's the new
normal, apparently. | 2:51:29 | 2:51:30 | |
And not just on dress down Friday. | 2:51:30 | 2:51:32 | |
Just one in ten British workers now
wears a suit to work | 2:51:32 | 2:51:35 | |
with most office workers
and their bosses | 2:51:35 | 2:51:37 | |
preferring a more casual dress code. | 2:51:37 | 2:51:40 | |
Fashion experts say it's also
because there are now fewer | 2:51:40 | 2:51:45 | |
divisions between the bosses at the
top and everyone else and it means | 2:51:45 | 2:51:48 | |
that firms are working together as a
team. So getting rid of that | 2:51:48 | 2:51:51 | |
distinction. A lot of you are
suggesting, you included, that I'm | 2:51:51 | 2:51:56 | |
off to play tennis. You look like
you're ready for a PE lesson at | 2:51:56 | 2:51:59 | |
school. Isn't the word mufty? For
dress down Friday, mufty? Really? If | 2:51:59 | 2:52:13 | |
that is a word, text as us and let
us know, because I had not heard of | 2:52:13 | 2:52:20 | |
it. Some people had never heard of
dress down Friday. I am embracing | 2:52:20 | 2:52:23 | |
it. You look like you're ready to go
home. See you! | 2:52:23 | 2:52:29 | |
I I thought I would leave you to
agonise over the word mufty, I'm | 2:52:29 | 2:52:35 | |
familiar with it. So I might! Thank
you. -- so I am right! This is | 2:52:35 | 2:52:44 | |
definitely an inspirational story. | 2:52:44 | 2:52:47 | |
Richard Gray's story
is sadly not unusual. | 2:52:47 | 2:52:49 | |
He suffered a huge stroke four years
ago and was found by his wife Fiona | 2:52:49 | 2:52:52 | |
who rushed him to hospital. | 2:52:52 | 2:52:54 | |
After emergency surgery,
he was ready to begin the long | 2:52:54 | 2:52:56 | |
and difficult road to recovery. | 2:52:56 | 2:52:57 | |
However what happened
next was unusual. | 2:52:57 | 2:52:59 | |
Fiona, a film-maker,
decided to document his recovery. | 2:52:59 | 2:53:01 | |
She captured the struggle she had
to get him the best treatment | 2:53:01 | 2:53:04 | |
and the incredible moments
of progress Richard made. | 2:53:04 | 2:53:07 | |
Let's take a look. | 2:53:07 | 2:53:10 | |
As a break from the intensive daily
routine, I took him to a centre that | 2:53:14 | 2:53:17 | |
specialises in treating
veterans with trauma. | 2:53:17 | 2:53:24 | |
The unique element of the therapy
that this place offers | 2:53:26 | 2:53:28 | |
is contact with horses. | 2:53:28 | 2:53:33 | |
And as soon as the horse
moved towards Richard, | 2:53:33 | 2:53:35 | |
his response was immediate. | 2:53:35 | 2:53:37 | |
Hello! | 2:53:37 | 2:53:41 | |
Hello! | 2:53:41 | 2:53:47 | |
It was amazing to hear
him talk so clearly | 2:53:47 | 2:53:49 | |
and spontaneously to the horse. | 2:53:49 | 2:53:53 | |
Hello... | 2:53:53 | 2:53:59 | |
And it was the first time I'd really
seen him do something like that | 2:54:06 | 2:54:09 | |
since he'd been ill. | 2:54:09 | 2:54:13 | |
Film-maker Fiona Lloyd Davis and
neurologist Nick Ward join us now. | 2:54:13 | 2:54:21 | |
To reiterate, not just filmic about
wife. This is so close to home. -- | 2:54:22 | 2:54:28 | |
not just filmic, but wife. This is a
terrible thing that happened to your | 2:54:28 | 2:54:33 | |
husband, you are a film maker.
Before we get into the process, it | 2:54:33 | 2:54:37 | |
is a big decision to start document
in something so personal. I had | 2:54:37 | 2:54:41 | |
always filmed Richard so he let me
as a film maker... You have do | 2:54:41 | 2:54:45 | |
expect that, he was a peacekeeper
with the UN so you had met him in | 2:54:45 | 2:54:51 | |
other circumstances? We met in
Sarajevo in 1992, I had gone out to | 2:54:51 | 2:54:55 | |
make a film about my sister who was
a doctor in the British Army. I met | 2:54:55 | 2:54:58 | |
him, he was the senior military
observer for the UN, I interviewed | 2:54:58 | 2:55:03 | |
him over a couple of days. So it
made sense even in those moments of | 2:55:03 | 2:55:07 | |
great personal turmoil, to sing, I
will start filming? Think it seemed | 2:55:07 | 2:55:14 | |
natural, I had filmed hint recently
talking about his experiences. I | 2:55:14 | 2:55:23 | |
reached for my camera once I knew he
was going to survive. I need to ask, | 2:55:23 | 2:55:28 | |
how is he now? He's great, good. | 2:55:28 | 2:55:35 | |
how is he now? He's great, good. You
played such a key part in his | 2:55:35 | 2:55:37 | |
recovery, what was your role and
what was your relationship with him? | 2:55:37 | 2:55:41 | |
We first saw Richard a year and a
half, two years after his stroke. So | 2:55:41 | 2:55:46 | |
he came to the rehabilitation
programme that we run at the | 2:55:46 | 2:55:52 | |
National Hospital for neurology and
neurosurgery. The reason that that's | 2:55:52 | 2:55:57 | |
interesting is because one of the
things for people after stroke is | 2:55:57 | 2:56:00 | |
that they can make quite incredible
recovery is, if they get the right | 2:56:00 | 2:56:05 | |
amount and the right dose of
rehabilitation. So Richard had | 2:56:05 | 2:56:09 | |
already been to a rehabilitation
unit and started to get some | 2:56:09 | 2:56:13 | |
movement in his arm and we were able
to take advantage of that and really | 2:56:13 | 2:56:17 | |
try and work hard with him on his
arm, getting him to be able to use | 2:56:17 | 2:56:20 | |
it and become more independent. To
get the context of this, we're | 2:56:20 | 2:56:26 | |
seeing what he's capable of doing,
but they would have been | 2:56:26 | 2:56:30 | |
unimaginable early on in the
process. Some of the imagery, it's | 2:56:30 | 2:56:33 | |
quite shocking, in the immediate
aftermath. The damage to his rain, a | 2:56:33 | 2:56:39 | |
part of his skull was removed, and
when you see him, -- the damage to | 2:56:39 | 2:56:44 | |
his brain, you can see there is a
part of his head missing. It looked | 2:56:44 | 2:56:49 | |
like he had lost part of his brain,
and there were some bleak moments | 2:56:49 | 2:56:54 | |
when I thought, would he be able to
recover? But then he would show | 2:56:54 | 2:57:00 | |
small signs that he was there, and
there were moments that gave me hope | 2:57:00 | 2:57:04 | |
and I thought, if I can get him to
the right place with the right | 2:57:04 | 2:57:08 | |
rehabilitation, then he will have a
chance to recover. It's difficult, | 2:57:08 | 2:57:12 | |
perhaps, to recover what he looked
like. We are going to show what | 2:57:12 | 2:57:16 | |
happened when he had his first
haircut after the first operation, | 2:57:16 | 2:57:19 | |
to give people an idea of the parts
of normality that you record in such | 2:57:19 | 2:57:25 | |
an abnormal environment. Now, what
you want basically is just a trim? | 2:57:25 | 2:57:33 | |
Despite everything, there were
moments of normality. Just think, | 2:57:33 | 2:57:37 | |
this time next week, you'll have had
your plate fitted. And when we heard | 2:57:37 | 2:57:41 | |
that Richard was about to have an
operation, he had his first haircut | 2:57:41 | 2:57:46 | |
in eight months. That such good
news. Fantastic, even it? I bet you | 2:57:46 | 2:57:53 | |
are looking forward to that? It will
be fine, darling. Mr Bentley does it | 2:57:53 | 2:57:58 | |
all the time. Good, happy? All done,
darling. Watching that, that's so | 2:57:58 | 2:58:10 | |
stark. What stage is that, is that
normal, to have that part of the | 2:58:10 | 2:58:16 | |
brain removed? The idea was that the
brain would the cavity the skull was | 2:58:16 | 2:58:21 | |
replaced. The reason that somebody
has a surgery like that is to save | 2:58:21 | 2:58:26 | |
their life. If the brain swells,
then it will lead to death. That | 2:58:26 | 2:58:30 | |
surgery is life-saving. After that,
it's important to try and repair | 2:58:30 | 2:58:37 | |
that, but the key thing in terms of
recovery is actually reorganisation | 2:58:37 | 2:58:42 | |
of the surviving parts of the brain.
So after stroke, you can think of a | 2:58:42 | 2:58:46 | |
stroke as leaving a hole in the
brain. That hold us not fill in. | 2:58:46 | 2:58:52 | |
Richard had lead, sometimes it is a
blood clot? Yes, it led to an -- | 2:58:52 | 2:58:58 | |
yes, he had a lead, that led to
quite substantial damage. Recovery | 2:58:58 | 2:59:05 | |
is reorganising other parts of the
brain. This is not a political | 2:59:05 | 2:59:12 | |
question at all, you are talking
about how important it can be, the | 2:59:12 | 2:59:19 | |
treatment, life transforming, but
who gets this kind of treatment? Is | 2:59:19 | 2:59:21 | |
it readily available to people who
have had strokes? Maybe that is one | 2:59:21 | 2:59:25 | |
for you, I did know. All of the
treatment that Richard receivers on | 2:59:25 | 2:59:32 | |
the National Health Service, our
programme is on the NHS. At 50% of | 2:59:32 | 2:59:37 | |
people who have strokes feel
abandoned after the acute phase, the | 2:59:37 | 2:59:41 | |
clotbusting drugs, for example, we
are very good at that. But we're not | 2:59:41 | 2:59:45 | |
quite so good at the recovery part.
So what they're really needs to be a | 2:59:45 | 2:59:50 | |
shift of emphasis is on to not just
life after stroke, that's a key | 2:59:50 | 2:59:54 | |
thing, organisations like the Stroke
Association of repression that which | 2:59:54 | 2:59:58 | |
is a key thing, but also thinking
about how we promote the best | 2:59:58 | 3:00:04 | |
possible recovery. That's going to
take a bigger dose of | 3:00:04 | 3:00:06 | |
rehabilitation. I know you said how
he is now, what can he do, what is | 3:00:06 | 3:00:14 | |
he able to do now? Physically, he's
very independent, great, he mows the | 3:00:14 | 3:00:18 | |
lawn, does the ironing. Thank
goodness! He can make me a cup of | 3:00:18 | 3:00:24 | |
Cossey, his speech is still coming.
For the half years later, we're | 3:00:24 | 3:00:29 | |
working hard and he has two speech
and language sessions per week. | 3:00:29 | 3:00:34 | |
That's private, we have not received
that on the NHS. But it's still in | 3:00:34 | 3:00:39 | |
proving and that's the main thing,
so he's able to communicate in | 3:00:39 | 3:00:46 | |
sentences. Do you have your whole
husband back? I think Richard is | 3:00:46 | 3:00:50 | |
there, the man that I love is there
and I feel incredibly fortunate and | 3:00:50 | 3:00:54 | |
grateful to people like Nick who
enabled him to make this recovery. | 3:00:54 | 3:00:58 | |
We're very grateful for you coming
in. Thank you for talking to us. | 3:00:58 | 3:01:05 | |
You can watch Horizon -
My Amazing Brain: Richard's War | 3:01:05 | 3:01:08 | |
on BBC Two this Monday at 9pm. | 3:01:08 | 3:01:15 | |
Just after nine o'clock we will talk
about the Eurovision contest for | 3:01:16 | 3:01:20 | |
trees. | 3:01:20 | 3:01:25 | |
The UK's entry is The Gilwell Oak in
the heart of Gilwell Park in Epping, | 3:01:27 | 3:01:31 | |
John Maguire is there now. | 3:01:31 | 3:01:39 | |
Yes, the Eurovision bark contest you
could call it. This picture was | 3:01:39 | 3:01:44 | |
taken in 1920 at the entry to Epping
Forest to the north-east of London. | 3:01:44 | 3:01:48 | |
It was set up by Baden Powell. He
set up this place and trained over | 3:01:48 | 3:01:54 | |
the years thousands and thousands of
Scout leaders. There would have been | 3:01:54 | 3:01:59 | |
tens of thousands of Scouts here.
This is the tree house looks today. | 3:01:59 | 3:02:03 | |
It is not in beef because it is
winter. This place has changed with | 3:02:03 | 3:02:09 | |
lots of new buildings and it is
still a centre for international | 3:02:09 | 3:02:13 | |
Scouting. We will say good morning
to our international Scouts. I'm | 3:02:13 | 3:02:21 | |
from Germany. I'm Patricia from
Barcelona. Howdy, folks, I am from | 3:02:21 | 3:02:29 | |
the states. Good morning. Good
morning, I am from Germany. I am | 3:02:29 | 3:02:42 | |
from Mexico. And I am John
originally from Aberystwyth. They | 3:02:42 | 3:02:47 | |
get 90,000 people here at Gilwell
Park camping. The trees stood here | 3:02:47 | 3:02:53 | |
for about 500 years. Caroline from
the Scouting Association and do from | 3:02:53 | 3:02:58 | |
the Woodland Trust, good morning to
you. Tell us about why this is an | 3:02:58 | 3:03:02 | |
important place for the Scout
movement? Scouts have been coming | 3:03:02 | 3:03:10 | |
here for 99 years. It was the first
place for a training course. The | 3:03:10 | 3:03:17 | |
movement lost many leaders in the
First World War. Every September we | 3:03:17 | 3:03:23 | |
hold a reunion for our volunteers.
They come here to socialise, meet | 3:03:23 | 3:03:28 | |
friends and develop more training so
they can don't pass on skills to | 3:03:28 | 3:03:32 | |
their young people. Dee, what is the
idea behind the European Tree of the | 3:03:32 | 3:03:38 | |
Year award. It is a wonderful
opportunity to celebrate our veteran | 3:03:38 | 3:03:43 | |
trees. The Gilwell Oak is a
magnificent example. It does not | 3:03:43 | 3:03:49 | |
just look great but it is about the
resonance that it has as well. And | 3:03:49 | 3:03:54 | |
the connection that it has the same
any people. We heard from Caroline | 3:03:54 | 3:03:59 | |
how many people value it. The
competition is a great opportunity | 3:03:59 | 3:04:03 | |
to express our love for these
beautiful trees, and also to | 3:04:03 | 3:04:07 | |
reiterate the fact that trees like
this have very little protection and | 3:04:07 | 3:04:11 | |
we need to celebrate them and get
more protection for our ancient | 3:04:11 | 3:04:15 | |
trees and woodland. We know about
the natural wonderful properties of | 3:04:15 | 3:04:19 | |
trees, not just as a resource but
what | 3:04:19 | 3:04:26 | |
they can do for cleaning air. It is
about the human relation with trees. | 3:04:32 | 3:04:35 | |
This year you have gone for one
British entry, 500-year-old oak. It | 3:04:35 | 3:04:37 | |
is a magnificent specimen. Trees
have ceremony benefits. They can | 3:04:37 | 3:04:40 | |
help with soil quality, water
quality, they can help with flooding | 3:04:40 | 3:04:43 | |
and also help us to breathe more
easily. Caroline told us about a | 3:04:43 | 3:04:49 | |
leader who strung hammock in the
Gilwell Oak and slept in it one | 3:04:49 | 3:04:54 | |
night. People have a connection with
this tree but also our ancient trees | 3:04:54 | 3:04:58 | |
all around the country which is why
we need to protect them. Thank you, | 3:04:58 | 3:05:03 | |
folks. You can vote for the Gilwell
Oak online at the European Tree of | 3:05:03 | 3:05:09 | |
the Year award. The winner will be
announced at the end of next month. | 3:05:09 | 3:05:13 | |
Dick Turpin once hid under here
while he was waiting for Stagecoach | 3:05:13 | 3:05:18 | |
is to come along so he could rob
them. He was a highwayman. I will | 3:05:18 | 3:05:24 | |
hand you back to the studio. I am
going to give the Gilwell Oak a nice | 3:05:24 | 3:05:28 | |
big hug.
John the tree hugger! That is our | 3:05:28 | 3:05:35 | |
entry. Thanks, John. He is still
there. | 3:05:35 | 3:05:43 | |
Why not? Feel the love. | 3:05:43 | 3:05:46 | |
We'll be joined by Joseph
Calleja in a moment. | 3:05:46 | 3:05:50 | |
Maybe he has been inspired for his
opera in open-air spaces. | 3:05:50 | 3:05:54 | |
That is the best place to hear it,
to let it resonate. | 3:05:54 | 3:05:58 | |
First, let's get a last brief
look at the headlines | 3:05:58 | 3:07:33 | |
Have a lovely day. | 3:07:33 | 3:07:41 | |
Welcome back. | 3:07:42 | 3:07:44 | |
The Maltese tenor Joseph Calleja
is regarded as one of the finest | 3:07:44 | 3:07:47 | |
opera singers in the world -
having wowed audiences performing | 3:07:47 | 3:07:49 | |
with stars such as Andrea Bocelli. | 3:07:49 | 3:07:51 | |
But life could have been very
different for Joseph, | 3:07:51 | 3:07:53 | |
who as a teenager, was far more
attracted by the power | 3:07:53 | 3:07:56 | |
of heavy metal. | 3:07:56 | 3:07:59 | |
We'll find out what made him switch
to opera in a moment - | 3:07:59 | 3:08:03 | |
first, take a look at him in action. | 3:08:03 | 3:08:10 | |
MUSIC: "Di quella pira"
by Verdi. | 3:08:12 | 3:08:43 | |
Charlie, you are sitting up. There
was no way we were going to come out | 3:08:53 | 3:08:58 | |
of that early. Joseph, lovely to see
you here this morning. Lovely to be | 3:08:58 | 3:09:04 | |
here, thank you. That is a
crescendo. That is known in opera as | 3:09:04 | 3:09:11 | |
the holy grail that every tenor,
unless he is crazy is scared of, the | 3:09:11 | 3:09:19 | |
high C has a difficult note. You say
to the holy Grail, physically, Opera | 3:09:19 | 3:09:26 | |
is a really physical thing to get
those notes? Opera is like a sport. | 3:09:26 | 3:09:33 | |
It is like you are an athlete. Your
whole body is the instrument. So | 3:09:33 | 3:09:39 | |
even if your vocal folds or cords
whatever you call them, are fine. If | 3:09:39 | 3:09:44 | |
you have acid reflux, a bug, even a
depressive state, it affects the | 3:09:44 | 3:09:50 | |
voice. It is your whole body which
is the instrument. If the body is | 3:09:50 | 3:09:56 | |
not well then the instrument is not
well. How are you feeling this | 3:09:56 | 3:10:00 | |
morning? I am not feeling bad. It is
early but it is a pleasure to be | 3:10:00 | 3:10:06 | |
here. Have you tickled the vocal
cords are smack in the shower where | 3:10:06 | 3:10:13 | |
we all sound like Caruso. I sound
fantastic in the shower. Would you | 3:10:13 | 3:10:20 | |
mind indulging us? Shall, at the
moment we are | 3:10:20 | 3:10:29 | |
moment we are singing Tosca in
Covent Garden. First I am going to | 3:10:29 | 3:10:31 | |
sing a short bit of Tosca and then
Verdi. | 3:10:31 | 3:10:43 | |
That was Puccini. | 3:11:06 | 3:11:08 | |
OPERA SINGING | 3:11:08 | 3:11:11 | |
That is pretty much. Do you like it
quite I am a little bit in love! | 3:11:27 | 3:11:34 | |
Well... Sorry. It is about love both
Arias are about love. The first was | 3:11:34 | 3:11:43 | |
probably the most tragic in Opera.
In the last scene the character is | 3:11:43 | 3:11:48 | |
about to be killed and he is
lamenting that he will never see his | 3:11:48 | 3:11:52 | |
beloved again. It is magnificent.
And sitting here as well, I was | 3:11:52 | 3:11:58 | |
really conscious of how much of you
is going into it, the breath | 3:11:58 | 3:12:02 | |
control.
The contrast is amazing. You can use | 3:12:02 | 3:12:09 | |
the voice, for example, in a pop way
would be... | 3:12:09 | 3:12:17 | |
# The world was on fire and no one
can save me but you... What about | 3:12:17 | 3:12:24 | |
heavy metal? You loved heavy metal.
I do. I was in a rock band. I had | 3:12:24 | 3:12:32 | |
some second cousins who live up
north near York. My cousin took me | 3:12:32 | 3:12:38 | |
to the Scunthorpe Rock open. I just
turned 40 week ago. This was when I | 3:12:38 | 3:12:44 | |
was 15, something like that. I had a
good voice and the band said they | 3:12:44 | 3:12:48 | |
wanted to sign me but I said maybe
not, I will go more for the | 3:12:48 | 3:12:53 | |
classical, because by then I had
started to study already. Opera is | 3:12:53 | 3:12:58 | |
not for the elite, Opera is not
boring, Opera is not for experts. | 3:12:58 | 3:13:04 | |
Opera is like the great wine of
winds. -- Wines. It is the ultimate | 3:13:04 | 3:13:12 | |
form of singing in my opinion, and
Opera as a whole is an incredible | 3:13:12 | 3:13:19 | |
spectacle to behold. Some days we
get very lucky sitting here. Lovely | 3:13:19 | 3:13:24 | |
to see this morning. Thank you for
having me. That has me away. | 3:13:24 | 3:13:33 | |
Joseph Calleja's album is called
Verdi and he is currently performing | 3:13:33 | 3:13:36 | |
in Tosca at the Royal Opera House. | 3:13:36 | 3:13:38 | |
That's it from us today. | 3:13:38 | 3:13:39 | |
Goodbye. | 3:13:39 | 3:13:42 |