09/07/2014 South Today


09/07/2014

Similar Content

Browse content similar to 09/07/2014. Check below for episodes and series from the same categories and more!

Transcript


LineFromTo

New security measures for electronic devices have been introduced for

:00:00.:00:00.

Why should I be treated likd this for asking for what I've bedn

:00:00.:00:27.

legally entitled to? If I'vd worked for it I should be paid it.

:00:28.:00:29.

The clergy knew about it but the police weren't told.

:00:30.:00:32.

Did the suppression of a church report into alleged child

:00:33.:00:34.

Remembering a Warrior ` an Isle of Wight monument to the

:00:35.:00:38.

And slimmer in the long run ` the weight watcher who's now

:00:39.:00:43.

About six stone heavier than I am now, a full on smoker, not ` healthy

:00:44.:00:59.

man. You just have those molents where you think, hang on a linute,

:01:00.:01:01.

I've got to do something about this. A BBC South investigation h`s

:01:02.:01:08.

revealed that thousands of care workers in the South could

:01:09.:01:10.

be getting less than the national minimum wage because they'rd not

:01:11.:01:13.

being paid to travel between jobs. We contacted 60 care companhes

:01:14.:01:16.

in Hampshire and just three said Home care services for

:01:17.:01:21.

the elderly cost the County Council But many workers earn less than

:01:22.:01:27.

the ?6.31 minimum wage. One told us she got just ?5.03

:01:28.:01:33.

an hour when her travel timd was Our health correspondent

:01:34.:01:39.

David Fenton investigates. Tomorrow, a major report on the

:01:40.:01:55.

issue will be put before MPs. This woman is expecting a baby btt she

:01:56.:01:59.

has lost her work as a carer Walker and money is tight. She complained

:02:00.:02:03.

about not being paid for tr`vel time and a few weeks later her company

:02:04.:02:06.

went bust. I feel there is injustice. Why should I be treating

:02:07.:02:11.

like this `` treated like this for asking for what I'm legally entitled

:02:12.:02:15.

to. If I'd worked for it I should be paid for it. Everyone else hn every

:02:16.:02:21.

other industry is so why not care workers? The firm she worked for is

:02:22.:02:26.

now in liquidation and under investigation by the tax

:02:27.:02:30.

authorities. We asked for a comment about her case, they declindd. This

:02:31.:02:35.

is one evening that she worked in March, starting with a ten linute

:02:36.:02:40.

journey to Waterlooville and then two more ten Minute Drive is around

:02:41.:02:45.

the town. Next a 20 minute trip and then another 20 minutes and back for

:02:46.:02:52.

the last job of the evening. That is one hour 30 minutes driving for

:02:53.:02:57.

which she was paid nothing. There is in excess of 100,000 carers out

:02:58.:03:01.

there in the sector and in less than national minimum wage. That is a

:03:02.:03:08.

scandal. The vast majority of those workers are also on zero hotrs

:03:09.:03:13.

contracts. That gives the elployer the ability to punish any of those

:03:14.:03:20.

workers who stand up to assdrt their statutory right to the minilum wage.

:03:21.:03:24.

The fact is most care workers are paid only for the time they spend in

:03:25.:03:31.

people's homes. Grace gets 315 minute visits a data helped

:03:32.:03:33.

rehabilitate her after a month in hospital. If you have had a rotten

:03:34.:03:40.

day or night, you've got soleone you can tell it to. Whereas if xou are

:03:41.:03:47.

on your own, you haven't got anybody to say anything too, have you? You

:03:48.:03:52.

are bottling it up. Low wagds make finding and keeping staff a problem.

:03:53.:03:59.

You have a right workforce who, to be honest, however much thex care,

:04:00.:04:05.

could do better working in Tesco's are a skilled kitchen, and we'd be

:04:06.:04:10.

in danger of losing them. Btt there are some companies that pay for a

:04:11.:04:16.

full day of work. Care workdrs need to be nurtured and if they `re not

:04:17.:04:20.

supported and fuel values and looked after, not just emotionally but

:04:21.:04:25.

financially, then how can wd expect them to do their job efficidntly and

:04:26.:04:30.

well? The County Council is changing its contracts next year and says

:04:31.:04:33.

workers will be paid for tr`vel time. Too late for Michelle, who

:04:34.:04:39.

says she wouldn't go back into carer work even if she could get ` job.

:04:40.:04:44.

Well, we asked the Health Minister Norman Lamb

:04:45.:04:46.

A little earlier, though, I spoke to Baroness Denise Kingsmill,

:04:47.:04:49.

a Labour peer who's the author of an independent report into carers'

:04:50.:04:52.

working conditions, and I asked her how widespread this problem was

:04:53.:04:56.

It's a pretty extensive problem that we found when we did

:04:57.:04:59.

I would say the majority of care workers now are not being p`id

:05:00.:05:05.

for travel between jobs and this is a totally unlawful exploitation

:05:06.:05:10.

Effectively, somebody is flouting the law here.

:05:11.:05:19.

Do you think it's the care companies or local authorithes?

:05:20.:05:22.

It's definitely the care companies in the first inst`nce

:05:23.:05:25.

They should be providing a proper rate for the job if they're

:05:26.:05:28.

Some of them are trying extremely hard to do so.

:05:29.:05:34.

But they are being squeezed by the local authorities,

:05:35.:05:36.

They, in turn, are being sqteezed by central government cuts,

:05:37.:05:42.

Is this as simple as getting HMRC to look at this

:05:43.:05:48.

Certainly, we need more resources put hnto

:05:49.:05:53.

These people earn little enough as it is.

:05:54.:05:58.

If you take away their travelling time out of that

:05:59.:06:03.

So there is definitely something where we need to really enforce

:06:04.:06:07.

But there are lots of other things we need to do as well.

:06:08.:06:13.

We don't know who these care workers are.

:06:14.:06:15.

The employers, the agencies, are often employing just about `nybody.

:06:16.:06:17.

We need a system of registr`tion so we can ensure they are properly

:06:18.:06:22.

paid, properly trained and that we know who they are.

:06:23.:06:24.

We wouldn't dream of having unregistered workdrs

:06:25.:06:27.

looking after our children ` why on earth do we have unregistered

:06:28.:06:30.

workers looking after our most vulnerable, elderly citizens?

:06:31.:06:34.

Allegations of child abuse were known to members of the clergy

:06:35.:06:39.

in Sussex but were not passdd on to police, according to ` report

:06:40.:06:42.

It was written ten years ago, after the conviction

:06:43.:06:47.

of a serial sex offender who had worked at Chichester Cathedral.

:06:48.:06:51.

But it's only been made public after a campaign by victims of abtse.

:06:52.:06:54.

Today the NSPCC called for `nyone failing to report such allegations

:06:55.:06:58.

to face criminal charges. Colin Campbell reports.

:06:59.:07:04.

Serial sex abuser Terence B`nks was jailed for 16 years in 2001

:07:05.:07:10.

He targeted boys at Chichester Cathedral

:07:11.:07:12.

The report was commissioned by the church to examine

:07:13.:07:18.

the mistakes surrounding the handling of the case.

:07:19.:07:21.

I've been fighting for this report to be released

:07:22.:07:25.

for a number of years, since I first found out abott it.

:07:26.:07:28.

The reason I've been fighting is because I believe lessons could have

:07:29.:07:31.

and should have been learned from this inquiry and that could

:07:32.:07:36.

have prevented a lot of harl and suffering over the years.

:07:37.:07:40.

The church says it never intended to publish the report in 2004 `s it

:07:41.:07:44.

When we look at the report `nd all its wonderful recommendations,

:07:45.:07:52.

we ask why it wasn't published and why it wasn't acted on,

:07:53.:07:57.

Yet again, it is a report that reveals alleg`tions of

:07:58.:08:01.

abuse made to clergy here in Sussex were not passed on to the police.

:08:02.:08:05.

It says one suspected abuser was allowed to return to work

:08:06.:08:11.

as a lay vicar after being told to confess his sins.

:08:12.:08:14.

It reveals three men, including Terence Banks,

:08:15.:08:17.

At least four others, not named in the report but closely

:08:18.:08:23.

associated with the cathedr`l, were suspected of abusing children.

:08:24.:08:25.

The Church of England today welcomed the announcement

:08:26.:08:28.

of the Government`ordered inquiry into institutional sexual abuse

:08:29.:08:33.

and believes the publishing of the report is a step

:08:34.:08:36.

Of course what is in there is disturbing.

:08:37.:08:39.

A national inquiry would take on board things like the report

:08:40.:08:44.

The first stage of a nation`l inquiry would look at all those

:08:45.:08:47.

Terence Banks worked as a floor manager at the BBC

:08:48.:08:53.

It's understood he met all his victims at Chichester Cathedral

:08:54.:09:03.

A teenager who went on an expedition to the Arctic Circle

:09:04.:09:05.

has been describing the momdnt his friend was killed by a polar bear.

:09:06.:09:14.

Scott Bennell Smith told an inquest in Salisbury,

:09:15.:09:18.

A teenager who went on an expedition to the Arctic Circle

:09:19.:09:21.

has been describing the momdnt his friend was killed by a polar bear.

:09:22.:09:23.

One after another, the young people who were on that

:09:24.:09:25.

expedition to the Arctic with Horatio Chapple three years ago

:09:26.:09:28.

described what happened on the night the Wiltshire teenager was killed.

:09:29.:09:31.

First was Patrick Flinders from Jersey,

:09:32.:09:35.

who still has the scratch m`rks on his face and where he was clawed

:09:36.:09:41.

by the polar bear when it rhpped its way into their tent that night.

:09:42.:09:45.

He said he was terrified, he closed his eyes and snuggled

:09:46.:09:47.

down, hiding in his sleeping bag, hoping to protect himself.

:09:48.:09:51.

Another witness was Lauren Beech, from Guildford in Surrey.

:09:52.:09:56.

She said she and Horatio had found paw prints in the ice a couple

:09:57.:10:02.

She said, after that, the group had a discussion `bout

:10:03.:10:07.

whether to have a bear watch, a look`out patrol every night, taking

:10:08.:10:11.

it in turns, but she said the group leaders had decided against that.

:10:12.:10:15.

She said until that attack she had had full confidence

:10:16.:10:19.

in the organisers of the trhp, the British Schools Exploring Society.

:10:20.:10:23.

She said, I was 16, I trusted them completely.

:10:24.:10:28.

The coroner is expected to give his verdict in this case here

:10:29.:10:32.

Teachers, firefighters, health workers and civil servants

:10:33.:10:38.

are to strike tomorrow in a dispute over pay and pdnsions.

:10:39.:10:41.

Over a million public sector workers are expected to strike

:10:42.:10:43.

Many of the South's schools won t open as a result of the acthon.

:10:44.:10:48.

The public is advised to consult council websites to check

:10:49.:10:50.

Still to come in this evening's South Today, unveiled ` a statue to

:10:51.:10:54.

the horse that came through the Great War and returned home

:10:55.:11:02.

It's considered a green source of energy, an efficient way to

:11:03.:11:05.

But one West Sussex farm's plans to greatly increase the production

:11:06.:11:12.

of biomethane, in addition to what it alre`dy makes

:11:13.:11:14.

from waste from its cows, have angered people living nearby.

:11:15.:11:17.

Residents near Plaistow in West Sussex say Crouchland Farm has

:11:18.:11:19.

become too industrial, with lorry and tractor movelents

:11:20.:11:21.

This film, made by residents living close to Crouchland Farm,

:11:22.:11:30.

They say they're too big, too noisy and too dangerous to be

:11:31.:11:37.

We just don't understand thd thinking behind trying to construct

:11:38.:11:44.

a massive industrial complex in the middle of a rural area wherd we ve

:11:45.:11:48.

got very rural road links, we are miles away from any of the strategic

:11:49.:11:53.

or local lorry routes, West Sussex approved lorry routes.

:11:54.:12:00.

It's just an inappropriate development.

:12:01.:12:04.

The vehicles move slurry, manure and silage to the farm,

:12:05.:12:07.

where it's used to produce electricity in anaerobic digestors.

:12:08.:12:12.

But as more and more was brought in from outside, including food waste,

:12:13.:12:16.

West Sussex County Council hssued an enforcement order obliging the

:12:17.:12:21.

It's appealing against that decision, while also applying to

:12:22.:12:28.

make and export bio`methane ` enough to heat 7000 homes.

:12:29.:12:34.

This diversification a step too far for some.

:12:35.:12:38.

Because of our location it's just not suitable

:12:39.:12:40.

We don't expect it to go back to being a farm with just a few cows.

:12:41.:12:46.

What we would really like to happen is

:12:47.:12:48.

the AD plant to live there `nd be an environmentally friendly nehghbour.

:12:49.:12:53.

By that I mean that they process their own waste that they produce

:12:54.:12:58.

from their own cows, they turn it into electricity

:12:59.:13:00.

and export it to the Grid, `nd I think that's a perfect situ`tion.

:13:01.:13:03.

Crouchland Farm says produchng energy locally is directly

:13:04.:13:06.

in line with Government polhcy and it's proud to make a me`ningful

:13:07.:13:10.

contribution to the country's renewable energy commitments.

:13:11.:13:14.

But residents say they will fight the planning application,

:13:15.:13:18.

which they say puts too much pressure on their community.

:13:19.:13:26.

A Dorset MP is holding a debate in Parliament today about the

:13:27.:13:29.

The MP for Bournemouth West, Conor Burns, is concerned about

:13:30.:13:34.

the visual impact of the scheme and its effect on the World Herhtage

:13:35.:13:37.

Supporters of the project say the turbhnes

:13:38.:13:41.

would generate enough electricity for nearly 800,000 homes a xear

:13:42.:13:46.

We said to them right at thd beginning, so long as this didn t

:13:47.:13:49.

have a significant visual ilpact and they pushed it out in the area

:13:50.:13:52.

they were allowed to develop into, we wouldn't have a problem with it.

:13:53.:13:55.

They have chosen to develop it almost as close to shore as they

:13:56.:13:58.

can get away with, where it will have the maximum visual imp`ct.

:13:59.:14:01.

It's the wrong application in the wrong place

:14:02.:14:03.

Doubt's been raised over the authenticity of a painthng

:14:04.:14:07.

purported to be the work of the artist Vincent van Gogh which was

:14:08.:14:11.

Houses At Auvers Two was hung in the Picnic Cafe last Friday to

:14:12.:14:16.

But some Van Gogh experts claim it's not genuine,

:14:17.:14:30.

Director of the gallery inshsts it is the real thing.

:14:31.:14:38.

Its owner insists the work hs the real deal, but admits it is yet

:14:39.:14:42.

Becoming a mum when you're a teenager is something

:14:43.:14:44.

Latest figures show that, in Southampton, 76 girls under

:14:45.:14:48.

Today, a charity in the citx which supports vulnerable young

:14:49.:14:52.

mothers and their families hs reaching out to the community to

:14:53.:14:55.

Many of the mums taking part in this cookery class have troubled pasts.

:14:56.:15:01.

Some are victims of domestic violence while others have suffered

:15:02.:15:04.

from postnatal depression and found it hard to cope after having a baby.

:15:05.:15:08.

It has really helped me to be me, sort of thing, and with the kids

:15:09.:15:19.

The life skills they show and teach you really help.

:15:20.:15:25.

The charity offers support for these women as well as ` safe

:15:26.:15:28.

Emma was helped out by the charity and now has a job here.

:15:29.:15:33.

People are all in the same boat as you, you know, everyone...

:15:34.:15:37.

Not everybody but a lot of people are the same or h`ve other

:15:38.:15:40.

problems as well, so kind of major problems not as big,

:15:41.:16:25.

and getting local businesses in Southampton to come in as friends

:16:26.:17:38.

friendly next Tuesday. They have released some players and a striker

:17:39.:17:44.

has signed from Cardiff. But they are yet to spend on the transfer

:17:45.:17:48.

window. It is not really ch`nged since I joined the football club. We

:17:49.:17:52.

should get on with it. We are enthusiastic about what we `re doing

:17:53.:17:56.

and everyone is very positive. We would like to add a couple of

:17:57.:18:00.

players but I can't see it happening in the foreseeable future.

:18:01.:18:02.

At the start of last season, on paper at least, the Royals

:18:03.:18:05.

looked promotion contenders but the side was dogged by injury problems.

:18:06.:18:07.

It was this match against Btrnley which sealed Reading's fate

:18:08.:18:10.

in seventh place, just missing out on the plaxoffs.

:18:11.:18:16.

People are thinking we are not as strong as last year and that is

:18:17.:18:22.

fine. We have 46 games to do as well as we can and I am sure, as we have

:18:23.:18:29.

seen in the World Cup, people can make predictions all they w`nt but

:18:30.:18:32.

it doesn't often come through. `` true. People `` we have young

:18:33.:18:42.

players who have shown qualhty on the training ground.

:18:43.:18:45.

A Thai businessman is currently in the frame to buy the club but

:18:46.:18:48.

For now it's a case of the youngsters getting their chances

:18:49.:18:53.

and the manager using all hhs skills to maybe cause an upset or two.

:18:54.:18:56.

In cricket's County Championship, Surrey couldn't force victory over

:18:57.:19:18.

In cricket's County Championship, Surrey best Glamorgan at Colwyn Bay.

:19:19.:19:21.

The Welsh county batted past Surrey's huge first innings total.

:19:22.:19:23.

Meanwhile, there's still a day left at the

:19:24.:19:25.

Ageas Bowl, where Gloucestershire are ahead of Hampshire.

:19:26.:19:27.

Dorset amateur golfer Georgha Hall will be back amongst

:19:28.:19:29.

the world's top professionals tomorrow, when she takes part in

:19:30.:19:31.

Dorset amateur golfer Georgha Hall will be back amongst

:19:32.:19:36.

The 18`year`old, who plays out of Parkstone Golf

:19:37.:19:38.

Club, was the joint leading amateur in last year's event.

:19:39.:19:40.

She goes into to Birkdale in good form, after finishing 3 rd

:19:41.:19:43.

in the European Masters last week, again playing against pros.

:19:44.:19:45.

Now to the remarkable story of an overweight,

:19:46.:19:47.

beer`swilling smoker who's turned his life around and later this month

:19:48.:19:50.

will be running the marathon for England at the Commonwealth Games.

:19:51.:19:52.

Steve Way is a bank clerk from Sturminster Marshall in Dorset.

:19:53.:19:55.

In Glasgow, he'll be a team`mate of Mo Farah.

:19:56.:19:57.

I've been to see Steve at his somewhat unlikely tr`ining

:19:58.:20:00.

Dodging pushchairs, dogs and sunbathers, Steve Way's preparations

:20:01.:20:09.

for the Commonwealth Games `re slightly different to the norm,

:20:10.:20:11.

It was September 2007 when something clicked.

:20:12.:20:17.

A virtual tap on the shoulddr nudged him into changing his life.

:20:18.:20:22.

I was sort of about six stone heavier than now, a full`on smoker,

:20:23.:20:26.

not a healthy man and, yeah, you just have those moments where

:20:27.:20:31.

you think, "Hang on a minutd, I ve got to do something about this.

:20:32.:20:34.

I started using running to lose weight, burn calories,

:20:35.:20:37.

26,000 miles later and it's turned into a little bit more than that.

:20:38.:20:44.

Steve's breakthrough came in April's London Marathon.

:20:45.:20:49.

The third Englishman behind Mo Farah and Aldershot's Chris Thompson,

:20:50.:20:52.

Steve's first global Games `re suddenly a reality.

:20:53.:20:56.

It wasn't something I'd actually reviewed beforehand.

:20:57.:20:58.

It was still a bit hard to comprehend but it was like, "Hang on

:20:59.:21:02.

a minute, I think I might bd going to the Commonwealth Games hdre!

:21:03.:21:05.

Seven years ago, Steve started jogging around

:21:06.:21:07.

In Glasgow, he'll be sharing the start line with some of

:21:08.:21:11.

But while they prepare at altitude in elite training groups, Steve s

:21:12.:21:16.

I've got some great clubmatds in Bournemouth AC

:21:17.:21:22.

A lot of solo running but I do get some help from some

:21:23.:21:29.

Despite overhauling his whole life, there is still time

:21:30.:21:34.

The guy that got me to that sort of overweight state is most

:21:35.:21:40.

definitely still there and H do let him out of the box sometimes.

:21:41.:21:43.

Normally sort of post`target race I'll have a bit of downtime and

:21:44.:21:50.

While Glasgow is his big st`ge, he wouldn't turn the clock back

:21:51.:22:00.

To have such a contrast of life now with the passions I've got, you

:22:01.:22:03.

know, my ambitions, my goals and what happened to me this ye`r, yeah,

:22:04.:22:09.

He actually runs ultra marathons, up to 150 metres. Six or seven hours.

:22:10.:22:31.

Now, as a stage play and a film Warhorse has taught many people

:22:32.:22:34.

a great deal about the role of millions of horses that served and

:22:35.:22:37.

died during the First World War That story was fictional.

:22:38.:22:40.

But today on the Isle of Wight, people were remembering

:22:41.:22:42.

the exploits of a real live warhorse who survived some of the biggest

:22:43.:22:45.

The horse was called Warrior and his rider was Jack Seelx.

:22:46.:22:50.

And this afternoon a statue of the pair was unveiled

:22:51.:22:53.

at Carisbrooke Castle. Steve Humphrey was there for us

:22:54.:23:03.

The statue of Jack Seely and his horse Warrior was unveiled by his

:23:04.:23:10.

grandsons. Both have been closely involved in efforts to highlight the

:23:11.:23:14.

story of the Isle of Wight's real warhorse. He shouldn't have survived

:23:15.:23:22.

and he was unbelievably lucky. He came to represent a symbol of simple

:23:23.:23:29.

upstanding heroism and he w`s a horse who wouldn't flinch, he would

:23:30.:23:34.

face danger without flinching, and he would not let fear take the

:23:35.:23:42.

reins. In the years before the First World War, Jack Seely and W`rrior

:23:43.:23:44.

spent happy hours riding across the island. They went to the front line

:23:45.:23:50.

in 1914 and survived four ydars of death and destruction. This famous

:23:51.:23:57.

painting by the artist Alfrdd Manning shows them on the Wdstern

:23:58.:24:02.

front. The statue is in a poignant and location. Jack Seely and Warrior

:24:03.:24:08.

are facing the chapel which commemorates all of those from the

:24:09.:24:11.

Isle of Wight killed in the First World War. Amongst them, Jack

:24:12.:24:18.

Seely's own son, Frank. On hearing of his son 's death, he got on his

:24:19.:24:24.

horse and rode off into the distance onto the beaches in Belgium,

:24:25.:24:29.

overcome with grief at that terribly sad event. After the war, they

:24:30.:24:34.

returned home where they enjoyed many years together. Warrior died in

:24:35.:24:43.

1941 and Jack Seely in 1947. Now, their story has been rediscovered

:24:44.:24:46.

and this statue will serve `s a reminder of their bravery and sheer

:24:47.:24:47.

good fortune. Tracey Smith took this photo

:24:48.:25:04.

of her dog Brandy Karen Matthews photographed

:25:05.:25:17.

New Forest ponies drinking And Mark Couper took this shot of

:25:18.:25:20.

St Huberts church in Idsworth. We have a fairly quiet night tonight

:25:21.:25:36.

with temperatures falling to 14 Celsius. A few clear spells. It

:25:37.:25:42.

really is an East`West designed The further west, clear and the further

:25:43.:25:53.

east, cloudy. These are the temperatures in towns and chties.

:25:54.:25:56.

Tomorrow is an East`West divide as well. West is best for sunshine

:25:57.:26:02.

More clout further east with the chance of rain in Surrey and Sussex

:26:03.:26:07.

and Berkshire. It could be heavy. The Met office have issued ` yellow

:26:08.:26:13.

warning for heavy rain for ` Sussex and Surrey through the day tomorrow

:26:14.:26:19.

and Friday. 22 possibly up to 2 Celsius tomorrow. Things ard warming

:26:20.:26:22.

up as we head to the rest of the week. Sunny spells for westdrn areas

:26:23.:26:26.

to end the day tomorrow but the band of rain will move west throtgh

:26:27.:26:31.

tomorrow night. Clear skies for western areas and here we m`y have

:26:32.:26:35.

some mist and folk with light winds but low temperatures of 13 or 1 .

:26:36.:26:44.

The rain will sink westwards through Friday but once it does the area

:26:45.:26:49.

will be humid behind it. Temperatures into the high teens at

:26:50.:26:52.

night. Quite uncomfortable for sleeping. A sticky feel to things.

:26:53.:26:57.

That is the case through Saturday as well. Temperatures could re`ch

:26:58.:27:05.

mid`or even high 20s in somd places. Friday has a mixture of `` Saturday

:27:06.:27:12.

has a mixture of sunny spells and understands. And the same on Friday.

:27:13.:27:21.

Thunderstorms are on the wax. Tomorrow, West is best for sunshine,

:27:22.:27:26.

East has clout and our pics of rain, and then thunderstorms

:27:27.:27:28.

arrived. Tomorrow a link between Southampton

:27:29.:27:38.

and the World Cup final in Brazil. More at eight o'clock and 1025 PM

:27:39.:27:42.

tonight. and this time the challenge

:27:43.:27:55.

is bigger than ever. Six young songwriters

:27:56.:27:58.

mark a major anniversary. It'll be really difficult

:27:59.:28:01.

to write a song for World War I They're really going to have to put

:28:02.:28:06.

themselves in those people's shoes. Guys, did that go perfectly?

:28:07.:28:09.

Did we forget the tune? I just don't want to mess it up

:28:10.:28:14.

There's a lot of pressure. A brand-new series

:28:15.:28:16.

of The Big Performance.

:28:17.:28:20.

Download Subtitles

SRT

ASS