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tv   BBC News  BBC News  April 8, 2024 11:45am-12:01pm BST

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team, arsenal is a good football team, however. if they feel like today, arsenal wouldn't that game, i am 100% sure. i am sorry to say that, but this is a matter of fact. lam very i am very disappointed that you drop seven_ i am very disappointed that you drop seven points in one week, when you are in_ seven points in one week, when you are in winning positions. we have to clean _ are in winning positions. we have to clean ourselves. we make stupid mistakes — clean ourselves. we make stupid mistakes. we have to learn from it. but on _ mistakes. we have to learn from it. but on the — mistakes. we have to learn from it. but on the other side, i am very proud _ but on the other side, i am very proud we — but on the other side, i am very proud. we see how we are improving. and the _ proud. we see how we are improving. and the potential from the squad and this team _ and the potential from the squad and this team is _ and the potential from the squad and this team is amazing. fenerbache's turkish super cup final against galatasary had to be abandoned after their players walked off the pitch in protest against the country's football federation. fernerbache had asked for the game to be postponed because they have a europa conference league game in greece on thursday. that was rejected and after deliberately fielding a youth team
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to preserve their top players, one minute and 41 seconds in, those players left and the match was abandoned. the club are also unhappy with turkish refereeing and the punishment given to some of their players after trabzonspor fans stormed the pitch during a league game last month. the next big thing in us tennis, ben shelton, has won his second career title at the atp 250 in houston. the 21—year—old beat defending champion frances tiafoe to become the youngest winner of the clay event since andy roddick more than two decades ago. shelton served 11 aces in the final and now climbs to 14th in the world rankings. greatjob to you and your team, this one stings, you did not go back to back titles, but you are the type of there who can go back to back. i want to see you do it again this year. hopefully in stuttgart, go back to back. as you have been such an inspiration to kids, people of colour, and our sport. just an
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amazing representation. america's danielle collins may be retiring at the end of the season but at the age of 30 she's in the form of her life. fresh from the biggest win of her career, at the miami open, collins won the charleston open title with a straight sets win over the fourth seed, daria kasatkina. it moves her up to 15th in the world rankings. and afterwards she celebrated with her dog quincy. what are floral ones. to play the match to me i didn't execute my game plan so seamlessly. what a way to win the tournament. excited about it. golf's first major of the year, the masters, starts on thursday. it's the first time this year that all the world's best golfers will compete together — because of course, many of them now play on the liv tour, including the reigning masters championjohn rahm, who made the move in december. rahm is looking forward to defending his augusta title and although he understands his defection made a huge impact, the spaniard believes there is hope the two sides can come
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to an agreement. the landscape of golf looks different this year than it did last year. in my transition i expected a tremendous amount of people do not be happy with it. but it hasn't been nearly as much, the criticism that other people did. now, there has been a meeting. there is a some discussions that haven't been there in the past. if anything we are closer to some kind of unification than ever. meanwhile, nelly korda claimed her fourth straight lpga tour victoy when she beat leona maguire in the las vegas matchplay. the american won 4 and 3 at shadow creek — her 12th career victory.
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organisers of the commonwealth games say they're "considering multiple proposals" to host the event in 2026. there's been uncertaity over the games' future since the australian state of victoria withdrew because of rising costs. the 2022 hosts — birmingham spent almost 780 million pounds and a former adviser to the city council said hosting it was a mistake. last week, singaporejoined malaysia in ruling out a bid for 2026. but the commonwealth games federation said it was "excited "by the early concepts, which aim to reset "and reframe the games". on to nba and the los angeles lakers had to do without superstars lebronjames and antony davis as they were beaten by minnesota. james was out before the start with flu—like symptoms, while davis was forced off in the first quarter after being hit in the face while making a tip in basket. it exacerbated an eye injury from a game last month and with davis off, the timberwolves pushed into the lead, anthony edwards adding 26 points in their 127—117 victory.
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what he heard in terms of him getting hit in the eye, the injury was the same, but that is it. no updates right now. and that's all the sport. her talent was indisputable. now, the life and music of amy winehouse is the subject of a new film, back to black. it follows her journey to becoming a star — as well as her later struggles with addiction. before this evening's premiere, our culture correspondent, charlotte gallagher, sat down with the film's director and its star. # tried to make me go to rehab, isaid no, no, no.# amy winehouse, a music legend. # no, no, no... # yeah, baby, and the rest. # tried to make me go to rehab.
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now a new film is telling her story. i was so excited by the idea of, you know, playing and getting in touch with amy — the girl, and then amy the singer — as well as, like, you know, the woman before the icon. and you, physically, transform in the film. you start as this really vibrant young woman and you become quite frail towards the end of the film and just seem so lonely and kind of cut off and let down by people. how did you feel about amy when you were making this film? i felt very in awe of her. when she first came on the scene, we were all sort of blown away by this, like, girl from camden that, like, had a lot to say and wasn't afraid to say it. it's difficult to go through the highs and lows of someone's life. and i think it's just about dealing with those moments with as much sensitivity as a person as possible and figuring out
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exactly what's happening. i don't write songs to be famous. i write songs cos i don't know what i'd do if i didn't. and for you, sam, how hard was it to find your amy — someone that can physically resemble amy, but then can also sing like her? well, really, it was important, mostly, that i could find someone that wasn't going to impersonate amy. there were many brilliant impersonators and people that looked like her or sounded like her. but marisa came in as herself — was the only one in the audition process who didn't try to look like her in any way. earrings, eyeliner or anything. # feel like a lady...# amy's grandma and her mum and dad are depicted in the film, but the family weren't involved in making it. i went to the family, you know, really out of respect that i was making a film about their daughter. and ijust wanted to sort of sit with them and hear their stories and then go off and make the film that i wanted to make.
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so they didn't have involvement, as in they could say what i could and couldn't do, but i wanted them to be able to come and visit set and see what we were doing and just have, again, like i said, a sense of respect that i was making a film about their daughter. a big part of the film is amy's troubled relationship with blake fielder—civil. i didn't meet blake. i wanted to meet blake, but i didn't meet blake. i set out to make the film, like i said, through her perspective. so her love of him, you know, had to be palpable. it had to feel real and we had to understand why she fell in love with him. and so it wasn't about making a sort of one—dimensional villain. we had to fall in love with him to understand why she wrote one of the greatest albums about their love. and... and, for me, really, the villains of the film, you know, it's addiction and paparazzi. and when you actually look back now at the headlines that were written about her, i mean, i was reading one
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that said, "amy goes to see blake "in court, but she can't hide the state of her shocking skin." and it's a picture of someone obviously very unwell. hm, yes. do you think now, obviously, what amy went through, what britney spears went through, that maybe we've moved on a bit as a society that people wouldn't be persecuted essentially like that? i don't know. recent news may say different. i felt like we maybe had evolved to this place of maybe that wouldn't happen now, but it feels like it is happening now. # we only said goodbye with words. # i died a hundred times.# what do you think she'd make of the film? i think that she would feel, like, the fact that we've sort of gifted her music back again in a different light, having seen the film, and people sort of feeling like they want to go and listen to it immediately afterwards and, you know, be more remembered for her music than for her tragedy.
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i feel like hopefully she would feel proud of it and us. and of herself, too, you know, as a catalogue of her achievements and what it was that she was able to create as a very young woman. i hope that she would watch it and feel, like, you know, proud of everything that she created. # and i go back to black.# charlotte gallagher, bbc news. back to black is out in cinemas from friday. now it's time for a look at the weather with carol kirkwood. another changeable week of weather. there will be some sunshine at times but there also will be wet and windy conditions. it will be cooler, especially on tuesday, and then it turns that bit warmer later in the week. by the weekend london will be back up to 20 celsius. this low pressure to the north—west of scotland is what is left of storm
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kathleen. but another area of low pressure is bringing in weather fronts with tree —— with rain attached to them. rain producing showers. heavier rain moving north over parts of wales, northern england, northern ireland. showers following on behind, pushing eastwards. some of those heavy and thundery. brighter skies across northern scotland with the wind continue to easier. temperatures 10-18 c, continue to easier. temperatures 10—18 c, north to south. if you are hoping to see the partial solar clips tonight you will be lucky. it is likely to be in the west but there is a lot of cloud and rain around. you might see it on the western isles, possibly west of northern ireland as well. but a lot of cloud and rain, temperatures falling away. heading on through tomorrow, all this rain, some of it still heavy and persistent, drifting towards the east. for a time snow on the mountain tops in the highlands, behind it, sunshine and showers. but
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blustery showers. windy whenever you are with coastal gales in wales and the english channel coast as well. temperature is cooler than today, 8-12 c, temperature is cooler than today, 8—12 c, north to south. as we head into wednesday, we start off on a bright note with some sunshine, cloud will come through quickly, this is a warm front bringing in rain, behind that wind changed direction to a south—westerly, a milder direction for us. there will be a change in the temperatures, going back up. 8—15. thursday is looking like a bright and breezy day. there will be a few showers knocking around at times large areas of cloud as well. for the most part it is going to be dry with a fair bit of sunshine. temperatures continuing to climb. i7 bit of sunshine. temperatures continuing to climb. 17 in aberdeen, 19 in norwich and london.
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live from london. this is bbc news. displaced palestinians start returning to the gazan city of khan younis — israel says it has withdrawn nearly all ground troops as it re—groups for the next stage of war. i'm here in jerusalem, i'm here injerusalem, in a region where many are watching to see if ceasefire talks in cairo will make progress. it will be speaking to the senior qatari adviser. the un's atomic watchdog warns a new drone attack on ukraine's zaporizhzhia power plant raises the risk of a "major nuclear accident." we'll be speaking to rafael grossi, the body's director general.
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the next phase of the post office horizon inquiry begins this week. former subpostmasters tell the bbc those responsible must be held to account. and millions of people are gearing up for a total solar eclipse, which will plunge parts of north america into darkness. hello, i'm geeta guru—murthy. welcome to bbc news now. we start in the middle east, where palestinians have begun returning to the devastated city of khan younis in southern gaza after israel said it was reducing the numbers of soldiers in the area, six months into the israel—hamas war. israel's defence minister said troops are being redeployed and preparing for further operations against hamas. the israeli military could still mount an offensive against hamas's last stronghold in rafah — despite the us
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leading international pleas for restraint.

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