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tv   Breakfast  BBC News  September 25, 2018 6:00am-8:31am BST

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good morning. welcome to breakfast with louise minchin and dan walker. our headlines today: a crucial vote for labour on brexit. the party decides whether to keep a second referendum on the table. theresa may strikes a deal with her cabinet on immigration. ministers agree there'll be no special treatment for eu citizens after the uk leaves. unsafe and illegal. we hear about a huge rise in seizures of counterfeit goods. three paralysed patients walk again with the help of a revolutionary electrical implant. tv on demand. from today, television programme ratings will be broken down to show exactly how many people watch on modern devices, as well as traditional sets. the excitement is building after completing one of sport's greatest comebacks. tiger roars into paris for the ryder cup. not long to go. we'll hear from jodie whittaker on the red carpet ahead of her dr who debut. you, you can look at the women, you
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can look up to men. but essentially, you are looking up to the doctor, who is an alien and represents something for everyone. it isa it is a chilly start on the broadcasting route in london. the brightest conditions will be in the south, in the north it will be cloudy with some rain and it is going to be windy. more in 15 minutes. very good morning to you. it's tuesday 25th september. our top story: labour's divisions over brexit could be further exposed today as members vote on whether to leave open the possibility of campaigning for another referendum. meanwhile, the shadow brexit secretary sir keir starmer, will use his speech at the party's conference to confirm that labour is preparing to vote down any deal the government manages to secure with the european union. our political correspondent chris mason sent us this report from liverpool. there are bags of enthusiasm forjeremy corbyn here, but rather less for leaving
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the european union. printed on the leaflets, emblazoned on the t—shirts, and written in the pamphlets. thank you, what can i say? the message is clear. we need labour to stay in and support britain staying in the european union, so that we can have a socialism for europe and notjust for britain. i also think we have to stop brexit because brexit is not a solution to the problems that people face. do you really believe you can stop brexit, because is due to happen in six months time? i mean, crazier things have happened! just like the conservatives, this is a party conflicted by brexit. plenty of its members hate it, plenty of its supporters voted for it. that's why labour is tying itself in dirty, great big knots about it. yesterday, seniorfigures here contradicted each other,
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even themselves, about whether another referendum should include the option to remain. labourfor leave might be a marginal voice within the party, but there are those here whose view is strikingly different from those handing out flyers outside. it is time we stopped thinking that the whole world is dependent and relies on the european union. we can do it, but labour needs to keep the faith with the british people who voted to leave. this morning, this man, the shadow brexit secretary sir keir starmer, will say in all likelihood labour will oppose any brexit deal ministers secure. but that won't stop the rows. brexit is casting a long, long shadow. chris mason, bbc news, in liverpool. we'll be speaking to the shadow brexit sectetary sir keir starmer at 10 past 7. eu migrants should not be given preferential treatment in the government's immigration system after brexit, ministers have agreed.
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the cabinet announced that highly—skilled workers should be prioritised and people coming to the uk to live and work would be subject to the same rules wherever they're from. ministers will set out further details later this year. theresa may and president trump will both attend the united nations annual meeting in new york today, using the opporunity to raise concerns with president rouhani, over on—going tensions with iran. mrs may will press for the release of the british—iranian charity worker, nazanin zaghari—ratcliffe, who has been imprisoned in tehran since 2016 on charges of spying, which she denies. domestic abuse victims and their children in england and wales are being put at risk because offenders are being allowed to drift through their sentences, according to a report by the probation watchdog. the inspectorate of probation found that officers had unmanageable workloads of up to sixty cases each, and held infrequent meetings with offenders in public places,
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like cafes, where they couldn't discuss sensitive issues. our home affairs correspondent, june kelly reports. police in northumbria responding to a report of domestic violence. those convicted of such crimes end up on probation in the community, either after, or instead of a jail term. but many of the private companies which have been given thejob of rehabilitating them, are failing. that's the conclusion of today's report by the probation watchdog. while offenders are left to effectively drift through their probation supervision period, they are left to go back to live with people that they have abused, to threaten those people, to intimidate and to abuse those people, and that should not be happening. at this rehabilitation centre in merseyside, they are having successes. jamie has received the help he needed to turn around what was a verbally abusive relationship with his partner. i could have potentially been injail, i could have potentially
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not even had my children. i didn't want my boys to grow up thinking it was ok to speak to women like that, and i didn't want my girls to grow up to think it was ok to speak to men like that. today's report found generally staff had unmanageable workloads and, as a result, in 70% of cases, work to protect victims and children wasn't good enough. under 20% of offender home visits had taken place, and only 27% of eligible offenders had been referred to a specialist programme aimed at stopping them abusing. the government says it is working to better protect and support victims of domestic abuse and to improve the company is dealing with the perpetrators. june kelly, bbc news. three people in the us, all paralysed from the waist down, have been able to walk again with the aide of an electrical implant. doctors used an electrode to stimulate nerves in the spinal cord to help overcome the injuries. experts say the device helps lost signals from the brain reach the leg muscles, as our health
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and science correspondent james gallagher reports. kelly thomas thought this would be impossible. it has been four years since she was paralysed from the waist down in a car accident. now, she can walk again, thanks to an implant in her spine and months of gruelling exercises. one day they were helping me, as usual, and then they stopped helping me and i took maybe three or four steps in sequence and ijust stopped and my lips started quivering and my ears, my face got hot and my eyes got teary. i was like "oh my god, that just happened, ijust took steps." kelly still needs a frame for balance, but says regaining movement has transformed her life. and she is not alone. jeff marquis was paralysed in a mountain biking accident, his spinal cord injury was stopping messages from his brain reaching his legs.
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jeff's implant electrically stimulates his lower spinal cord to help it pick up the faintest messages that are still getting through. teams of researchers at the university of louisville and the mayo clinic have used this technology to help three people walk again. kelly is using the implants in her daily life and has plans of ditching the frame, too. but this is not a miracle cure for paralysis, it is still unclear why it works for some patients and not others. but it is another sign of the huge steps being made to treat this most like changing of injury. james gallagher, bbc news. remarkable pictures, aren't they? 50 many mysteries around it, working for some and not for others. the hit bbc series doctor who quickly developed a cult following when it first aired in 1963, as millions of us were gripped by the sci—fi
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adventures of the extra—terrestrial timelord. now, 45 years later, it welcomes the first female to the lead role, with the arrival of jodie whittaker as the 13th doctor. our entertainment correspondent lizo mzimba has more. alien worlds, the past, the future. so far, so familiar, but the new doctor who also has perhaps, a more contemporary field. the show ‘s launch was in sheffield, a key location in the new series. which is of course, also making history with jodie whittaker, the first woman to play the doctor. it is really emotional because when i was younger, the characters i wanted to be work, 90% of the time, portrayed by the bullies. so, for some young kids now to realise that you can look up to women, you can look up to men, but essentially you are looking
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up men, but essentially you are looking up to the doctor, who is an alien and represents a for everyone. jodie whittaker‘s casting and represents a for everyone. jodie whitta ker‘s casting collected headlines all around the world, but the show is aimed to become more inclusive has gone on behind the camera as well. on the writing and directing team there are more women and people of colour. it is important it is a show for everyone, inclusive for everybody regardless of gender or heritage. it is a big, inclusive show and doctor who is about celebrating life and the universe and being alive and that sense of adventure is open to all. to work best audiences, doctor who, of course, has to have stories that excite viewers of all ages. the team is hoping that in its new home on sunday nights, it will satisfy traditional viewers and bring in new ones too. lizo mzimba, bbc news, sheffield. a little update there. 55 years. i
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went to have a chat with the doctor myself, which you will be able to see, i think we a showing it next monday. clearly having a great time there. she is incredibly funny and a bit mad and i love it. i think she is said to be an amazing doctor. haven't been able to see one frame of it. she found it very funny that it is so toxic that, all —— top—secret, essentially all she could tell me that the new series is that she is in it! that is about it. never stopped you from doing an interview. it is on bbc one sunday, seventh of october. nothing like a bit of healthy competition. especially between husband and wife. the duke and duchess of sussex went head to head in a netball shootout, giggling their way through it. they were at loughborough university to present awards to graduates
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of an apprenticeship programme, that trains unemployed young people to be sports coaches and mentors. and if you're wondering, harry's team won the drill. really? what is that facebook? she looked really good. —— face for. she looked really good. —— face for. she looked really good though. looked really good. —— face for. she looked really good thoughlj looked really good. —— face for. she looked really good though. i scanned through one of the papers today, all sorts of details about her outfit. including the shoes! the most expensive netball outfit ever worn! a £1700 blouse! she should get one of those nice net all dresses they have now. have you got netball in your sport? not in this one, you never know, maybe later. we had
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ple nty la st never know, maybe later. we had plenty last week. we are talking about tiger woods again the. we spoke yesterday about his comeback, amazing to see him on court and the penny drops and go, tiger woods is back on form. he has arrived in paris for the ryder cup. is rubbish in paris! laughter. after that incredible comeback, tiger woods' attentions now turn to winning the ryder cup with the united states. both teams arrived in paris yesterday ahead of this weekend's contest. much more on that throughout the programme. croatia midfielder luka modric beat cristiano ronaldo and mo salah to win the fifa best male player of the year award. he won his third champions league title in a row with real madrid in may and helped croatia to their first world cup final this summer. salah got the best goal. brazil and orlando pride striker marta was named the women's player of year.
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it's the sixth time she's won the award, but this is her first title in eight years. and cricket australia say they've found no new information on claims one of their players racially abused england's moeen ali during the 2015 ashes and the matter is now closed. they investigated after moeen made the allegation in his new book. i know you are a goal fan, i have interesting ryder cup merchandise coming up. i will wear my ryder cup jacket for you tomorrow. was it £400? no, it was not £400. you wear it when you are watching it, don't you? listen, it has worked in the past! i love that. because you are wearing it? guests at you should come around my house and watch the cap radiator. what a lovely offer! —— watch habitat radiator. cap radiator. what a lovely offer! -- watch habitat radiator. -- gladiator. carol is on the roof at new broadcasting house with the weather for us this morning. good morning. it is a chilly start
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to the day at across many parts of the country. in the south temperatures have dipped down to freezing in some parts. in the north where it is easier, hanging on to temperatures of six to eight. patchy mist and falk should clear quite readily. so a chilly start for many of us in we are looking at windy conditions in the north of the country, across parts of scotland, northern ireland and parts of northern england as well with gusts of 40 mph, more than that with exposure. if you are travelling, bear that in exposure. if you are travelling, bearthat in mind. exposure. if you are travelling, bear that in mind. as far as scotland, northern ireland and northern england, are largely dry start at the weather fronts coming in will introduce rain through the course of the day. further south, high pressure firmly in charge keeps things fairly settled. after that dry start in scotland, northern ireland and northern england, we will see the rain coming in. heaviest across the western isles
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and western scotland, and parts of cumbria and north wales much later in the day. to the east of the pennines something dry and bright and as he comes out we will have the driest conditions and the sunshine, and temperatures up to 20 or 21. aberdeen could also see 20 degrees, so aberdeen could also see 20 degrees, so temperatures up and where they we re so temperatures up and where they were yesterday. as we go through the evening and overnight, we will still have the rain. it will still be windy, especially across the western isles and some of that rain sneaking southwards again, getting across parts of north—west wales and cumbria. south of that, mist and fog forming but not terribly problematic, and clearer skies as well. and the milder night than the onejust gone. so well. and the milder night than the one just gone. so tomorrow we start off with all that rain moving south and weakening as it does so. ahead of it we are looking at some brighter skies, still some sunshine, and once again temperatures continuing to climb that little bit higher. we are looking into the 20s we re higher. we are looking into the 20s were some parts of the country, but
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on thursday see the highest temperatures, they are likely to be up temperatures, they are likely to be up to 2223 in east anglia and the south—east, but we also have a weather front coming in and bringing rain across the north—west of scotland, and as that settles with a weakening feature, it will be lighter rain as it thinks south across northern ireland and northern england —— 22 or 23. in some parts of the north of scotland they will be down as low as nine degrees. if you like it that bit warmer, over the next couple of days for many of us the next couple of days for many of us that will happen. don't forget it will turn cooler, and will do so at the weekend. and steph is coming tojoin us to have a look at the front pages. the daily telegraph leads on its take on the labour party conference, and also reports on the start on an independent inquiry into thousands of deaths from contaminated blood. the picture isjodie whittaker on the red carpet of the doctor who premiere in sheffield yesterday.
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prime minister theresa may has faced down cabinet critics of her brexit plan, according to the times. the duchess of sussex is also shown trying her hand at netball at a university awards ceremony. the guardian looks at how rape cases are treated by the criminaljustice system. it reports suggestions that prosecutors in england and wales have been urged to take a more risk—averse approach to combat low conviction rates. the crown prosecution service has denied changing its approach. and new doctor whojodie whittaker is pictured with her co—stars. finally, the mail has a story about bank scams. the paper says fraudsters cheated customers out of an average of almost £1 million a day in the first six months of this year, up 50% on 2017. the front page also features a look at new bbc one drama killing eve, which some fans claim to be ten times better than bodyguard. and a littler spoiler alert for this, one of the most—read
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articles on the bbc news website this morning. close your ears if you haven't watched it. it is looking at how the finale of bodyguard could help people with post—traumatic stress disorder. it features a former army officer with ptsd, who says others could now be encouraged to recognise their symptoms and seek help. it isa it is a real positive to come out of a powerful bit of television. you do know you have given away the ending? we did what they were spoilers. just say his name one more time. david budd. and i had to interview the
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cast, but i was sworn to secrecy in a way cast, but i was sworn to secrecy in awayi cast, but i was sworn to secrecy in a way i have never known before. to even watch it, i had loads of different passwords, and they wouldn't work, so they had to doublecheck that i really wasn't going to tell anyone, so i can't tell you anything other than that it is great. the only thing you could tell me is that she is in it and that she wears that coat. it is interesting, because her costume, you think she is wearing a pair of crop trousers and a jumper, but everything has been really carefully thought about, absolutely everything she wears. we will look at the inside pages, but a quick look at that story about this yachtsman who was rescued shortly after we were on air yesterday. we couldn't tell you on breakfast yesterday, but a p pa re ntly on breakfast yesterday, but apparently where the yacht was was
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right at the extreme limit of immediate rescue range. the midpoint between south africa and australia, and the second sailor basically competing yesterday was also rescued as well. what do you have over there, doctor who's best mate? don't give me any guff, we will see what happens here. and lots of the papers talking about the success of deliveroo, green jacketed talking about the success of deliveroo, greenjacketed bike couriers bringing food, and amazon have made preliminary approaches to try and buy deliveroo. uber were also in talks with them, but it is interesting to think that amazon wa nt interesting to think that amazon want this type of delivery service as part of their folder as well. they are already huge. as part of their folder as well. they are already hugelj as part of their folder as well. they are already huge. i have some of what then will be shopping for in
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the next couple of days. if you hadn't noticed already, he loves the ryder cup. this is the team europe and team usa outfits. team europe jacket is £400, and that particular jacket is £400, and that particular jacket is £400, and that particular jacket is £150, half zip jumper at £140, full zip jumper £150, full zip waterproof jacket, £140, full zip jumper £150, full zip waterproofjacket, £450.” £140, full zip jumper £150, full zip waterproof jacket, £450. i know it is expensive, but it is an occasion. if you are going to a wedding you spend a lot on a posh dress. if you are going to a wedding you spend a lot on a posh dresslj suppose spend a lot on a posh dress.” suppose you wear your golf stuff a lot. exactly. but if you put golf before something it makes it more expensive. isn't thatjust before something it makes it more expensive. isn't that just a waterproof jacket? a very good waterproof jacket? a very good waterproof jacket, and when waterproof jacket? a very good waterproofjacket, and when you go to the masters, the average spend is £750. but the average spend to get there is probably £200. we need to
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get out more. there is just six months to go until we leave the european union, and details of the uk's exit still remain unclear. today, labour members will vote on whether to keep all options on the table, which could include another referendum. breakfast‘s jayne mccubbin went to liverpool, where the labour party conference is being held, to find out what people make of the vote. give us a twirl. you know he makes sense says carol's t—shirt, but on the day's conference? what does everything on the table mean? well, it means everything on the table. including staying in the eu, do you think? i do think that is on the table. the stick as were out and flags as well, but not all delegates we re flags as well, but not all delegates were enthused. the majority of people at the time didn't come out.
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ididn't people at the time didn't come out. i didn't agree with it, but we've got to stick by it, if you are a democracy, what the majority want. do you think there will be people who voted to leave within your party who voted to leave within your party who think this is a betrayal?” don't think so, actually. what people don't realise is just because you voted to stay in the eu doesn't mean you are happy with it. we've got to fix it. then says now is the time to hit the stop button and fix it from the inside. inside the van, chris was noncommittal. do you have an opinion on it? no. not one you wa nt to an opinion on it? no. not one you want to share with me? not obloquy. can be read into this expression something? because even if the final brexit destination is far from clear, there are those like other who say it is time to crack on with the journey. nothing who say it is time to crack on with thejourney. nothing will who say it is time to crack on with the journey. nothing will change your mind? nothing will change my mind at all, no. what would you think of a political party who say perhaps people should be given the chance to change their mind?” perhaps people should be given the chance to change their mind? i would feel a little bit angry about that. i would feel a vote has been wasted.
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the day's motion hopes to swerve by thinking again about the detail of the divorce, maybe even the divorce itself. we can speak now to our political correspondent iain watson, who is at the labour conference in liverpool. iain, do we know when the vote is expected to happen? first of all, what keir starmer, the shadow brexit secretary, will be saying, is this. whatever comes back from brussels won't satisfy labour's six test, onjobs in from brussels won't satisfy labour's six test, on jobs in the economy, whether we get the same benefits we have now from the single market, so labour are preparing to vote against whatever theresa may brings back from brussels. they will need the help of conservative rebels to defeat her, but that is their first position. the second edition is if
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that happens they will call for a general election. if she looks at the polls and doesn't fancy that much, they will look at another option. that option is campaigning, as they call it, for a public vote amongst other unspecified options. so although they have said everything is on the table, it might turn out to be a very small table, an occasional table, maybe, a small coffee table, but not a large dining table, because the only option they might have is going down the road of calling for another referendum. then the confusion begins. what do you ask for in that referendum? the shadow chancellor, john mcdonnell, said he felt it should be a referendum on theresa may's final deal but most of the labour members, that i spoke spoke to, including the shadow brexit secretary, think remaining in the eu should be an option in the referendum if that becomes the preferred option. i think that argument effectively could be kicked down the road little bit, so today they will vote in principle to have a public vote, as they call it, a referendum, as most
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people call it, on the table. the precise question of that referendum depends on a whole range of other factors, including further discussions, i think, factors, including further discussions, ithink, among labour's top team. and just remind us, there is an important vote today, isn't there? there will be a vote on brexit today, so they will vote effectively... i think there is no chance of this vote being defeated in the slightest, but they will vote over what was hammered out over 5.5 hours of discussion the other night. and that will pass around lunchtime today. thank you very much. i think iam even today. thank you very much. i think i am even more confused about what sized table. but thank you for guiding us through. we will hope to get some clarity from keir starmer on all of that a little bit later here on breakfast. my gran used to have an occasional table.” here on breakfast. my gran used to have an occasional table. i don't even know what an occasional table looks like. it is a little folding up... looks like. it is a little folding
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i looks like. it is a little folding up... iwillwhip looks like. it is a little folding up... i will whip out the occasional table. don't worry, i have the occasional table. i think. still to come on breakfast: more than 6.5 million counterfeit goods have been detained in the uk since 2015. we will be at the port of felixstowe, where national trading standards check for unsafe and illegal goods. time now to get the news, travel and weather where you are. good morning, i'm asad ahmad. a teenager from fulham who died after a severe allergic reaction to a baguette bought from a shop at terminal 5 at heathrow airport pleaded with her father to save her. natasha ednan—laperouse became ill on a flight a short time after eating the sandwich at pret a manger. she died hours later, despite her father administering two epipen injections. west london coroners court heard the baguette contained sesame, which natasha was allergic to, but the ingredient wasn't listed on the packaging.
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and, seperately, allergy sufferers who keep an epipen in case of emergency are warned that they are in short supply. the jabs are used to prevent people who suffer severe allergies going into anaphylactic shock, but supplies of the medication are affected due to manufacturing issues in the us. child versions of the injectors are currently said to be even more scarce. londoners are being urged not to succumb to fast fashion, and instead recycle their clothes more, as well as wear the ones that lie unworn in the wardrobes. the fashion recycling charity traid has found a quarter of londoners throw clothes in the bin rather than recycle them or donate them. a similar number buy new clothes every month. london already has the worst recycling record in the country, but the charity believes our fashion carbon footprint can be massively reduced. let's have a look at the travel situation now. there is a good service on the tubes this morning. traffic building up over
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the marylebone flyover as you head into town. while in morden, bishopsford road is closed both ways between the rose hill roundabout and lillieshall road because of a serious accident. finally, the a3 northbound through kingston vale has a lane shut because of an abandoned car just before robin hood roundabout. let's have a check on the weather now, with elizabeth rizzini. hello, good morning. i'm sure you've noticed by now that it's a very chilly start to the day. temperatures in some of our rural spots have dipped right back to freezing, so there's a touch of frost out there, as well as a few shallow mist patches as well. so there's a cold start to what will be a very pretty day of weather. it should stay dry, there will be lots of blue sky and sunshine to enjoy. very similar to how it was
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yesterday, in fact, when we got 16.5dc in central london. we are expecting something similar today, touching those temperatures or perhaps even nudging a bit higher, between 15 and 17 celsius, just a light breeze and many of us will stay cloud free for much of the day. now, through this evening and overnight we're going to keep those clear skies, and with light winds there will probably be, again, a few shallow mist patches forming. but temperatures would be quite as cold tonight as they were last night. so we re tonight as they were last night. so were looking at starting off the day tomorrow between about four and eight celsius, so still a fairly chilly start to the day but not as cold as it was last night. tomorrow, again, more sunshine around. temperatures creeping a little bit higher, 21 degrees. but look at this. thursday, 23 celsius, pleasa ntly warm this. thursday, 23 celsius, pleasantly warm in the sunshine. i'm back with the latest from the bbc london newsroom in half an hour. hello, this is breakfast with louise minchin and dan walker. it is just after
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it isjust after 6:30 a.m.. we'll bring you all the latest news and sport in a moment, but also on breakfast this morning: with hedgehog numbers in decline and colder weather on the way, we're at a sanctuary in somerset that's calling for donations of cat food to help sick and injured hedgehogs survive the winter. make—up artist charlotte tilbury will be here with tips for the best looks at every age as she celebrates five years in business. and new film ‘american animals' tells the true story of how fourfriends plotted a brazen and elaborate heist of rare art books from an american university. director bart layton will be here on the sofa. good morning. here's a summary of today's main stories from bbc news. labour's divisions over brexit could be further exposed today as members vote on whether to leave open the possibility of campaigning for another referendum. meanwhile, the shadow brexit
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secretary sir keir starmer, will use his speech at the party's conference to confirm that labour is preparing to vote down any deal the government manages to secure with the european union. eu migrants should not be given preferential treatment in the government's immigration system after brexit, ministers have agreed. the cabinet announced that highly—skilled workers should be prioritised and people coming to the uk to live and work would be subject to the same rules wherever they're from. ministers will set out further details later this year. theresa may and president trump will both attend the united nations annual meeting in new york today, using the opportunity to raise concerns with president rouhani, over on—going tensions with iran. mrs may will press for the release of the british—iranian charity worker, nazanin zaghari—ratcliffe, who has been imprisoned in tehran since 2016 on charges of spying, which she denies. domestic abuse victims and their children in england
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and wales are being put at risk because offenders are being allowed to "drift" through their sentences, according to a report by the probation watchdog. the inspectorate of probation found that officers had "unmanageable" workloads, of up to sixty cases each, and held "infrequent meetings" with offenders in public places, like cafes, where they couldn't discuss sensitive issues. the government says it has consulted on how best to deliver probation services in the future. three people in the us, all paralysed from the waist down, have been able to walk again with the aide of an electrical implant. doctors used an electrode to stimulate nerves in the spinal cord to help overcome the injuries. experts say the device helps lost signals from the brain reach the leg muscles but also warn the research is still in its early stages. one day we were walking and they were helping me, as usual, and then they stopped helping me and i took maybe three or four steps in sequence and ijust
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stopped and my lips started quivering and my ears, my face got hot and my eyes got teary. i was like "oh my god, that just happened, ijust took steps." we have got more on that story later for you, really is an amazing development. here's a unique way to deal with unwanted hold—ups at the airport. when a flight to venice was delayed by an hour, members of the camerata of lee—man orchestra decided to treat their fellow passengers with an impromptu concert in the middle of geneva airport. they kept everyone entertained until the flight took off. that his genius! the benefit of hand luggage. on certain airlines you
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would not be able to get that.” luggage. on certain airlines you would not be able to get that. i was the lady at a somebody lost their passport. one person. one hour, 200 of us. managing to park —— pack it into the hold luggage. they then got it out. how did they get it through? i don't know! i don't any of the a nswe rs i don't know! i don't any of the a nswers to i don't know! i don't any of the answers to these questions. did they have a violin? laughter. in 200 people, i think 50%, at least of those would be full rants. about two. i was going to say fight sense. -- 596. can two. i was going to say fight sense. —— 5%. can you believe if you are tiger woods's caddy looking after those golf clubs on the plane. look at that day, duty—free, and nice bottle of aftershave? enormous
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sunglasses. bless him. tiger, whistle know it is you. —— we still know. we talked a lot yesterday about his comeback and how great that is. he has flown in for the ryder cup everyone. but he is not very good at the ryder cup, is he? both the us and europe teams arrived in paris yesterday. woods doesn't have a great record as a player but he was a vice—captain for the americans' victory last year, and their captain is very happy to have tiger on this team. when you look at now comparing past ryder cups to this one, i think what is so special is that tiger has ingrained himself in our team atmosphere and become such a big pa rt atmosphere and become such a big part of the team in 2016 as a vice captain, and then again in 2017 as assistant captain of the presidents cup. i think it is special for assistant captain of the presidents cup. i think it is specialfor him now tojoin cup. i think it is specialfor him now to join these younger players as a teammate. and in the spirit of rory mcilroy‘s fresh prince look, the european captain
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thomas bjorn is also as cool as a cucumber. he says the team will face "one of the strongest american teams of all time", but they're showing no fear. we don't fear anyone because we played against them so many times before individually, but we respect our opponents and know what we are up our opponents and know what we are up against. that is the key to all of this. we will go out and do what we can and play our game. on the other side, we know is one of the strong this american teams of all time and we know we have got to play our best. the croatia midfielder luka modric was named as the best male player at the best fifa football awards in london. he beat cristiano ronaldo and mo salah to the honour, recognition for his contribution as real madrid won their third champions league title in a row in may and croatia reached their first world cup final in the summer. to win so many trophies with madrid,
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with croatia as a captain, reach the world cup final to win some individual awards, has been amazing. it is difficult to find the words to describe how good year it was and just really amazing. brazil and orlando pride striker marta was named the women's world player of year. it's the sixth time she's won the award, but this is herfirst title in eight years. liverpool's mo salah picked up the puskas award for goal of the year for his strike against everton last december, fending off gareth bale and cristiano ronaldo for the trophy. the most presigious award in football is the ballon d'or. previous winners include cristiano ronaldo and lionel messi. and this year, for the first time, there'll also be a women's winner. france football magazine, which runs the award, said creating the prize was a "logical step" given the growing popularity of the women's game. lots of awards to be had.
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cricket australia say they've found no new information on claims one of their players racially abused england's moeen ali during the 2015 ashes. the allegation was investigated at the time, but has been re—examined after moeen wrote about it in his new book. the australian board has now closed the matter. you'd think andy murray would know how to look after silverware, he's won enough of it after all. is he? i am not so sure. but it seems he can be as clumsy as the rest of us. the former world number one was being presented with a plate to mark his contribution to tennis in china, but he dropped it. there are no words. it smashed as well! have we got that again? i do know flick and play that again. —— i don't know if we can play that
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again. we are playing scrabble later, i think there are is a h in whoops. that is a definite smashed. murray is playing at the shenzhen open. i wonder if he will be allowed back? i once gave a, i once gave a footballer at a cake, it was his birthday. —— footballer a cake. it was like this, thank you so much and it was like this... no! and at least ta ke and it was like this... no! and at least take it out of the room. take it out of the room. it had just been bought, happy birthday, here is the cake. take gone. —— cake gone. did you pick it up before and see it? --
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did you pick it up before and see it? —— see it. —— eat it. and — he's not the only one who smashed it. have a look at this. sings star spangled banner. its corn! —— it is corn! —— it is gone! have another go. screams. that is her singing in herfull la
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galaxy kit. seven? seven. she might have a future. thanks very much stop it is it called a harvest moon?” believe it is. —— thanks very much. those are two street lines —— streetlight and that is the harvest moon. it's the september full moon although it could sometimes fall in early october. these are some of the amazing images that our weather watchers have captured across the country, including wigan, scarborough, waterloo and woodley. the harvest moon occurs every year and is the full moon closest to the autumn equinox, signalling the start of the new season. feels like the start of a new season. carol is on the roof at new broadcasting house with the weather for us this morning. good morning, absolutely right with the definition of the harvest moon
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and it allows farmers and growers to collect their crops later in the day because it is so bright. it also means we have got clear skies if you are seeing it that right and it is actually start the day across many parts of the uk. not as cold in the north because here what we have is a bit more of a breeze. chilly start for most of us this morning, it is also going to be windy across the north of the country across scotland, northern ireland and also northern england, particularly windy in the west of scotland, especially the western isles. high—pressure is dominating the weather for the south, fairly settled and we have weather fronts coming in from the we st weather fronts coming in from the west which will introduce reign as we go through the course of the morning to western scotland and northern ireland initially. you consider progress that that rain is making. the heaviest of which will be in the west. as become south in —— underthe be in the west. as become south in —— under the clear skies, be in the west. as become south in —— underthe clear skies, some patchy mist and fog that will lift readily and for many it will be dry
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with some sunshine. here is only sit high temperatures, up to about 17. we are looking at roughly 12— 14, maybe 15 across scotland, northern ireland and northern england. through the evening into overnight, we will have that rain and it will be pretty windy in the north, especially across the western isles. as become further south, what you'll find is they will have clearer skies and some showery mist and fog patches forming. it will be a milder night than the night that has just gone. more cloud and dribble —— drizzle getting in across cumbria and the far north of wales. as we start tomorrow, we will have that rain, it will be sinking south as a weakening feature. ahead of it again in the south we are in for a dry day and a sunny one and it will be a bit warmer again. east anglia and the south—east seen highs of 21, aberdeen tomorrow will see highs of 20. as aberdeen tomorrow will see highs of 20. as the move on into thursday, a
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new weather front coming in across the north—west will introduce reign, as it skip southwards across northern ireland, into northern england eventually, there would be much more than the band of cloud. the odd patch of light rain or drizzle. behind it will feel that bit fresh, scotland having highs of 90 degrees. ahead of it, we are in the dry conditions and sunshine and temperatures in the by then could hit 22 or 23. for some of us, it will get warmer, for some of us a bit cooler. thank you very much carol, see you in half an hour. we have heard lots of headlines about how mobile phones and tablets are changing how we watch tv programmes, but the success of bodyguard shows appointment—to—view tv appears to be alive and well. further 10 million people watched it live and gazillions downloaded it on iplayer. steph has been looking into the future of tv ratings. we all know lots of people watch
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things on different devices, and when you talk about the live element, people don't want to miss it and find out what happened on social media. it feels like you have to avoid the world if you miss a big drama events, because everyone is talking about it. so barb work out how many people are watching tv, and they normally do this just through your television set, and they do it with a panel of homes that they have given boxes to. and they use boxes on tv which tell you what is being watched. however, the way we watch tv has changed massively.
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lots of us are watching live or on catch—up on our phones, tablets, pcs and laptops. we used to only know how many times a programme was streamed on these new devices, but from today, we will know how many people have watched this way. so now they will include devices. things like tablets, pcs, phones, and measuring how many people are actually watching things. if you look at how many people are using these new devices, we have eastenders and lots of people would be watching that on live tv, now people are watching it on mobile as well. more than 98% of tv is still being watched on telly, so it is about 1.3% that comes from devices, but varies depending on what programme it is. it is still a big number who actually watch it on a box at home, and the rest on devices. but it varies depending on what programmes we are talking about. love island, 3.9 million watched
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the last episode on a tv set, and then nearly another million watched on devices likes phones and tablets. so that works out at about 24%, so a lot more than that 1.3%. so it depends on what people are watching, and the age of the people watching as well. so explain about barb and how they get to these other numbers. best person to explain it is the boss of the company that does it. here is the ceo of barb. we have two sources of data, the first is a panel of homes around the country, representing the breadth of the country in terms of the different types of people who live in the uk. in alongside that, we now have a source of data where we are collecting viewer information directly from devices, the connected devices like tablets on pcs and smartphones that are used to watch tv programmes, through apps such as
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bbc iplayer or itv hub. so obviously they are now including different devices, but what they are not including is things like youtube and netflix, who keep their numbers very secret. so there could be a whole load more numbers including those sites. especially including young people. we also know that people watch bbc breakfast on tablets, and also on iplayer. it is bigger live events people tend to watch, i remember watching the world cup on the train on my phone, desperate for a bit of signal, so big live events get into together as well. and also sometimes i will watch tv at home and have a little tablet down here. you are a multidevice user. you have to keep across these things.”
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you are a multidevice user. you have to keep across these things. i don't think i have ever double watched.” triple watched ones. you can't remember any of it, can you? and talking about iplayer viewers, if you want to watch something on brea kfast, you want to watch something on breakfast, you can keep watching live on the iplayer. for the wordsmiths among you, we are looking for help with triple letter score suggestions as we have started our own game of scrabble. 300 new words have been added to the game's official dictionary, including arancini, facepalm and puggle, a cross between a pug and a beagle. we asked some gamers in manchester if they are familiar with any of the new words. i've not got a clue what puggle
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means. arancini, but that little rice balls. puggle, half pint half beagle, nothing to do with harry potter. i know it is quite a new word in the vocabulary, so it makes sense that has just word in the vocabulary, so it makes sense that hasjust been included now, same as facepalm. i still know what a puggle ears. scrabble can be quite a complex game, it really shows your powers with vocabulary, and things like that. i think if you simplify it or diamond down with things like eu, i think they are probably inappropriate for scrabble. i don't know what that means, that's a bit bizarre. i have no idea. i like scrabble. it's harder than a normal game. steph, you like scrabble, i can see
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this. i do quite like it, the best ever word i got on a game once was xylophone. i was just lucky with my letters. was that a lot of points? it was a good few with my x and why. it was a good few with my x and why. it is all about the two letter, ok is now acceptable. oi is always a secret one, especially at the end, when you have a few tiles left in the bag. i was trying to get facepalm, but i have lost my letters. so far! facepalm, but i have lost my letters. so far i have facepalm, but i have lost my letters. so far! have had more letters. so far! have had more letters thrown at me than have gone on the board. other new ones,
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sheeple, people who are docile or compliant, frowny, which is to contract the brow in contemplation, yowza, used to express surprise. this is a really useful and, i didn't know this one either. the liquid that results when beans cooked in water, which isjust pretty gross, isn't it? aquafaba. twerk is now acceptable as well. my family wouldn't be having this. do you look it up or have it out as a family? in the new dictionary you can say, you can't have twerk, well
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actually... my christmas is going to feel very different now. later in the programme, we will speak to linguistics expert rob drummond about how language has evolved. a p pa re ntly apparently eu is now ok, used to express disgust. bearers c underneath there, it is very valuable, worth three! i tried to pass steph a few letters, she has lost them. anyway, i am off to do some serious news. still to come, we will be at the port of felixstowe checking for u nsafe port of felixstowe checking for unsafe and illegal goods, and they really ca n unsafe and illegal goods, and they really can be dangerous, causing fires, some of these goods.”
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really can be dangerous, causing fires, some of these goods. i have never played upside down scrabble before. time now to get the news, travel and weather where you are. good morning, i'm asad ahmad. a teenager from fulham who died after a severe allergic reaction to a baguette bought from a shop at terminal 5 at heathrow airport pleaded with her father to save her. natasha ednan—laperooz became ill on a flight a short time after eating the sandwich at pret a manger. she died hours later, despite her father administering two epipen injections. west london coroners court heard the baguette contained sesame, which natasha was allergic to,but the ingredient wasn't listed on the packaging. and seperately, allergy sufferers who keep an epipen in case of emergency are warned that they are in short supply. the jabs are used to treat people going into anaphylactic shock, but supplies of the medication are affected due to manufacturing issues in the us. child versions of the injectors are currently said to be even more scarce. we had a situation only last week
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where a prescription was brought in for 2p for a disabled child and we we re for 2p for a disabled child and we were unable to get it. the medication is expiring at the end of the month, and the parents are saying what do i do? so as i said, i told them to hang onto their pens, not to dispose of it, and hoping that the situation is quite soon. londoners are being urged not to succumb to fast fashion, and instead recycle their clothes more, as well as wear the ones that are unworn in the wardrobe. the fashion recycling charity traid has found a quarter of londoners throw clothes in the bin rather than recycle them or donate them. a similar number buy new clothes every month. london already has the worst recycling record in the country, but the charity believes our fashion carbon footprint can be massively reduced. let's have a look at the travel situation now. there is a good service on the tubes this morning. traffic building up over the marylebone flyover
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as you head into town. while in morden, bishopsford road is closed both ways between the rose hill roundabout and lillieshall road because of a serious accident. in limehouse, the a101 down to a single lane. let's have a check on the weather now, with elizabeth rizzini. so there's a cold start to what will be a very pretty day of weather. it should stay dry. there'll be lots of blue sky and sunshine around to enjoy. very similar to how it was yesterday, in fact, when we got 16.5 degrees celsius in central london. we're expecting something similar again today, matching those temperatures or perhaps even nudging a bit higher, between 15 and 17 celsius. just a light breeze, and many of us will stay completely cloud—free for much of the day. now, through this evening and overnight, we're going to keep those clear skies, and with light
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winds there'll probably be, again, a few shallow mist patches forming. but temperatures won't be quite as low tonight as they were last night. so we're looking at starting off the day tomorrow between about four and eight celsius, so still a fairly chilly start to the day, but not as cold as it was last night. again, tomorrow, more sunshine around. temperatures creeping just that little bit higher, 21 degrees. but look at this — thursday 23 celsius, pleasantly warm in the sunshine. va nessa vanessa feltz has her breakfast show on bbc radio london. good morning. welcome to breakfast with louise minchin and dan walker. our headlines today: a crucial vote for labour on brexit. the party decides whether to keep the option of another referendum on the table. theresa may strikes a deal with her cabinet on immigration. ministers agree there'll be no special treatment for eu citizens after the uk leaves. unsafe and illegal. —— three paralysed patients walk again with the help of a revolutionary electrical implant. a beautiful business.
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after a career as a makeup artist to the stars, charlotte tilbury launched her own brand five years ago. i'll be talking to her within the next hour about the future of the cosmetics industry. the excitement is building after completing one of sports greatest comeback. tiger roars into paris ahead of the ryder cup. and we will hear from ahead of the ryder cup. and we will hearfrom jodie ahead of the ryder cup. and we will hear from jodie whittaker on the red carpet, ahead of her doctor who debut. you can look at the women, you can look up to men. but essentially, you are looking up to the doctor, who is an alien and represents something for everyone. from the roof of broadcasting house in london, it is actually start. chile for many parts of the uk today. the south once again having a fine day, dry, sunny and temperatures up to 17. the north of it, more cloud, windy and more rain coming. i will have more in 15 minutes. it's tuesday 25th september.
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our main story: labour's divisions over brexit could be further exposed today as members vote on whether to leave open the possibility of campaigning for another referendum. meanwhile, the shadow brexit secretary sir keir starmer, will use his speech at the party's conference to confirm that labour is preparing to vote down any deal the government manages to secure with the european union. our political correspondent chris mason sent us this report from liverpool. what exactly will party members get to vote on later? essentially what the shadow brexit secretary will be saying is that virtually any deal that theresa may brings back from brussels won't touch labour's test. they have said that the test are not there to be passed, they are there to be failed and in effect he doesn't see any prospect of theresa
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may matching up to labour's expectations of protecting jobs and the economy and. what delegates will be voting on his desk, a sequential series of events that might lead to a new referendum. what labour will say that this if they vote down the deal in parliament and arejoined by conservative rebels to do so, they will then call for a general election. if theresa may doesn't fa ncy election. if theresa may doesn't fancy that, then all other options are on the table. i'm trying to work out what they are. the only one that is mentioned will be the possibility ofa is mentioned will be the possibility of a public vote and campaigning for that. certainly, labour will of a public vote and campaigning for that. certainly, labourwill be confirmed today that they will have the option of a new referendum if circumstances allow. i think we have to be very careful, that is what will be agreed, sorry about the spoiler alert. then the question opens up about what will be the question of that referendum and whether you will have the right to vote to remain inside the european
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union. that it a list of friction between labour's top ten. don't forget, we have several hurdles to ove rco m e forget, we have several hurdles to overcome before we get that stage. theresa may has been meeting with the cabinet and discussing what immigration will look like after brexit. what have they agreed in principle, after that issue? it is important to establish between what they have agreed in principle and what might actually happened. they have agreed that migration would be based on skills, not nationality. to help the economy grow, there will be an emphasis on people with higher skills coming to britain, whether from the eu or outside. if you scratch beneath the surface, what i can hearing is this, they may have what they call white touch migration for people coming from the european union, saying it would be preferential treatment or freedom of movement, there might be a special deal cut for eu migrants, so long as it is part of a wider trade deal,
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can get something in return and they say to similar system might be negotiated with other countries when it does trade deals post—brexit, for example with america or the indian subcontinent. thank you. theresa may and president trump will both attend the united nations annual meeting in new york today, using the opportunity to raise concerns with president rouhani, over on—going tensions with iran. mrs may will press for the release of the british—iranian charity worker, nazanin zaghari—ratcliffe, who has been imprisoned in tehran since 2016 on charges of spying, which she denies. three people in the us, all paralysed from the waist down, have been able to walk again with the aide of an electrical implant. doctors used an electrode to stimulate nerves in the spinal cord to help overcome the injuries. experts say the device helps lost signals from the brain reach the leg muscles, as our health and science correspondent james gallagher reports. kelly thomas thought this
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would be impossible. it has been four years since she was paralysed from the waist down in a car accident. now, she can walk again, thanks to an implant in her spine and months of gruelling exercises. one day i was walking and they were helping me, as usual, and then they stopped helping me and i took maybe three or four steps in sequence and ijust stopped and my lips started quivering and my ears, my face got hot and my eyes got teary. i was like "oh my god, that just happened, ijust took steps." kelly still needs a frame for balance, but says regaining movement has transformed her life. and she is not alone. jeff marquis was paralysed in a mountain biking accident, his spinal cord injury was stopping messages from his brain reaching his legs. jeff's implant electrically stimulates his lower spinal cord
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to help it pick up the faintest messages that are still getting through. teams of researchers at the university of louisville and the mayo clinic have used this technology to help three people walk again. kelly is using the implants in her daily life and has plans of ditching the frame, too. but this is not a miracle cure for paralysis, it is still unclear why it works for some patients and not others. but it is another sign of the huge steps being made to treat this most like changing of injury. james gallagher, bbc news. the hit bbc series doctor who quickly developed a cult following when it first aired in 1963, as millions of us were gripped by the sci—fi adventures of the extra—terrestrial timelord. now, 55 years later, it welcomes the first female to the lead role, with the arrival ofjodie whittaker as the thirteenth doctor. our entertainment correspondent lizo mzimba has more. alien worlds, the past, the future.
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so far, so familiar, but the new doctor who also has perhaps, a more contemporary field. the show‘s launch was in sheffield, a key location in the new series. which is of course, also making history with jodie whittaker, the first woman to play the doctor. it is really emotional because when i was younger, the characters that i wanted to be were, 90% of the time, portrayed by the boys. so, for some young kids now to realise that you can look up to women, you can look up to men, but essentially you are looking up to the doctor, who is an alien and represents something for everyone. jodie whittaker‘s casting collected headlines all around the world, but the show‘s aim to become more inclusive has gone on behind the camera as well. on the writing and directing team there are more women, more people of colour, all bringin the episodes to life.
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it is important it is a show for everyone, it's inclusive for everybody regardless of gender or heritage. it is a big, inclusive show and doctor who is about celebrating life and the universe and being alive and that sense of adventure is absolutely open to all. to work best for audiences, doctor who, of course, has to have stories that excite viewers of all ages. the team is hoping that in its new home on sunday nights, it'll satisfy traditional viewers and bring in new ones too. lizo mzimba, bbc news, sheffield. you have not been allowed to watch that yet, even though you went to go meet the doctor yesterday.” that yet, even though you went to go meet the doctor yesterday. i had a lovely chat with jodie whittaker yesterday in sheffield, it was very top secret, although she can say is that she is in it and she has a sonic screwdriver. you will be a will to see that interview with her next week. she is a good laugh and i
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think she will be a brilliant doctor. i notice you have a buzzer there. all will be revealed. ok! i can hardly wait! you will have to watch next week. and don't forget the new series is on bbc one, on sunday 7th october. it is ten minutes past seven there. thank you for being with us today. there's just six months to go until we leave the european union, and details of the uk's exit still remain unclear. today labour members will vote on whether to keep all options "on the table", which could include another referendum. breakfast‘s jayne mccubbin went to liverpool, where the labour party conference is being held, to find out what people make of the vote. give us a 12, carol. you know he makes sense, says her t—shirt, but on today's motion, in a sense? what is everything on the table mean?m means everything on the table. including staying in the eu? yes, i
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think that that is on the table. the stickers were out, flags too, but not all delegates were infused. the majority of people at the time wa nted majority of people at the time wanted to come out. i didn't agree with it but we have got to stick why if we are a christie, what the majority want. you think there will be people who voted to leave within your party, who will see this as a betrayal? i do think so actually. because what people don't realise, i think, is thatjust because you voted to stay in the eu doesn't mean you are happy with it. we have got to fix it. the vans has now is time to fix it. the vans has now is time to hit the stop button and fix it from the inside. inside the van, chris was noncommittal on you have an opinion on it? no. not one you wa nt to an opinion on it? no. not one you want to share with me? not publicly. because even if the final brexit destination is far from because even if the final brexit destination is farfrom clear, there are those, like arthur, who say it is time tojust are those, like arthur, who say it is time to just crack on with the journey. nothing will change my mind
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at all, no. what would you think of at all, no. what would you think of a political party who said perhaps people should be given a chance to change their mind? i will feel a bit angry about that. my vote has been wasted. is the uncertainty at the end of this road which today hopes to swerve, by campaigning again on the detail of the divorce, maybe even the divorce itself. we'rejoined now from liverpool by shadow brexit secretary, sir keir starmer. good morning to you. thank you very much. i want to put the same question that we put to our guest. what is everything on the table actually mean? it means that we are going to have to make really big decisions in the next few weeks and months and i think everybody recognises the talks are going badly and it looks as though we are heading for either a bad deal or even no deal. so what we are saying, loud and clear is we at the labour party will vote down a bad deal and vote down a no deal because that is not good for our country. if the
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general election doesn't happen than other options need to be available, including a public vote. there is a structured approach, recognising different decisions that have come down the track in the next few months and we need a position on each of those decisions are. you have been quite clear. let's go to things you said. said you will vote down a bad deal, no deal, does that mean you will vote down any deal? when the promised a science the article 50 letter, we set out six tests for her, they were not locked out of the air, they were based on the commitment and promises she made. she said this is what i will achieve. when we set the test she saidi achieve. when we set the test she said i will meet them. we will apply those to what comes back. look at —— looking at the state of the negotiations, which are failing, it looks like she would not meet those test. in those circumstances we will vote against the deal that she
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brings back because we have said that those test we're are important about safeguarding our country, economy and jobs. that is the first stage. i think everybody is looking on aghast at the negotiations and scratching their heads to say how on earth has it got this bad, with weeks to go, we are in such a chaotic state. that is the first stage. is based on the test that the prime ministers said should achieve. use a this is a negotiation but you yourself are saying you are not offer a compromise on the six point. no, the sixth tests set out the conditions, as it were, for our support for the deal. if the prime minister was able to meet them, that would be one thing. she has set herself on a course where it is near impossible to do so. that's because she had the wrong negotiating strategy and i think everybody can see it is simply not working. i don't think you can turn to the labour party and say you set out your test, can you just because the
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pm is doing a hopelessjob? we stuck with a test because that was the condition on which we said the negotiation should take place. at the point where we are, from where you are saying, it you will vote down a no deal, bad deal at pretty much any deal? asi as i say, we made it clear at the start of the process that these are the tests. if you get a deal that satisfies the test, then great, because that is what you said you will do, but the prime minister is failing in that. there is no blame on the labour party because the prime minister is failing in her mission. her party is utterly divided and they won't let her negotiate. at this stage it is not unusualfor negotiate. at this stage it is not unusual for there to be a gap between the uk and the eu, you might expect that with weeks to go. the question is whether the prime minister can close that gap, and the thing that is stopping her is that her own party is utterly divided. she can't take a step in the right direction. that is the background for this, that is why we are heading for this, that is why we are heading for a bad deal or no deal. i have
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gone around the country and i haven't met many people who have said this is exactly what i wanted to happen. most people are looking on with growing anxiety about where we have got ourselves to. can we clear up we have got ourselves to. can we clearupa we have got ourselves to. can we clear up a couple of things, because there seemed to be some confusion yesterday about the public vote and about the possibility of a vote in another referendum, yes? will include the option to remain? would it include that? well, we had a meeting where we obviously drafted the motion. it was the delegates meeting, and the idea was that there would be the option of a public vote. the question that would be asked was left open because we don't yet know the circumstance in which we will find ourselves, and to give an example of that, we don't know whether they will be a deal that could perhaps be voted on, or no deal. but i can be clear about this. there was no intention, nor did the motion, rule out the option of remain. but we don't actually know
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the circumstance we are going to find ourselves in because we don't yet know whether there will be a deal we will argue about or no deal, and therefore there are two different sets of circumstances.” am sure you saw different sets of circumstances.” am sure you sanohn mcdonnell yesterday seeming to contradict things when he said the vote would be on the detail of the brexit deal, not a referendum, let's play that. it would be on the deal, and parliament would determine the form of words on that. you are suggesting a vote on a deal, not a vote to stay in orto a vote on a deal, not a vote to stay in or to leave. we respect the original referendum. so if you could clearup, original referendum. so if you could clear up, you don't know at this point of the vote would be on? the meeting on sunday was very clear that it would be... the question would be wide enough to encompass the option of remain. and you have played me a clip ofjohn mcdonnell, john later said all options were on the table. so there this difference of opinion between me and john mcdonnell and the whole party is united around the motion going
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forward this morning, and that is absolutely clear, that the question is open and nothing is being ruled out including the option of remain. what you are going to see today is the whole of the labour party unite about that position, and that is quite something, contrasted with what you are probably going to see next week at the tory party conference. if by tuesday of next week they are united around a proposition i would be extremely surprised. are just want to ask you one question as well, are you talking to tory rebels at this point? well, there are discussions across the house of commons all the time. what is important, if we reach either no deal or the deal is voted down is that, as it were, the house of commons takes control of the situation, and that can only be done if opposition mps and some government mps work together, and through the passage of various bills, etc, we have had conservative mps voting with us on propositions that they have put forward. that is pa rt that they have put forward. that is part and parcel of parliamentary life. are you actively talking to
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them at the moment? well, there have been discussions going on over the past two years with different people across the house of commons. that is not uncommon, it happens on issues all the time. because in truth there isa all the time. because in truth there is a consensus, i think, in the house of commons, that this is not what anybody expected to happen, and there is a consensus that we cannot simply allow no deal to happen because of the failure of these negotiations. and i think that if we get to that stage this autumn most mps will be prepared to say we need to do something to prevent us crashing out the eu without a deal. just one more question, if i could ask you, as well, the cabinet agreeing in principle that after brexit eu nationals and people from other parts of the world would face the same immigration rules if they wa nt to the same immigration rules if they want to live and work in the uk. what do you think of that idea? do you agree with that? well, i think we would all agree that a fair and effective system is needed. i think everybody has been put out either
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hostile environment where some immigrants are treated in a hostile way that we have seen examples of recent months. so the idea that people are discriminated against here is right. but at this stage of negotiations we need to be careful to ensure that, if we want to close economic relationship with the eu, that may include discussion around the rules around eu nationals. so we have to wait and see what detail the government puts on it, but i think there is a strong feeling that subjecting one group of immigrants toa subjecting one group of immigrants to a hostile environment was wrong and it needs to be righted. let us know what you think about that interview or anything else on the programme on social media and via e—mail. carol is on the roof at new broadcasting house with the weather for us this morning. good morning. lovely blue skies and a stunning sunrise from london this
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morning. the chilly start in many parts of the country, particularly in the south. we have temperatures at the moment hovering around freezing in some parts of the south in rural areas. but in the towns and cities they are a little bit higher. but they are a little bit higher again as we push further north, because it is more breezy here. so this morning at chilly start for many of us and we are also looking at windy conditions across the north today, especially the north—west, where we could have gusts of 60 mph, with generally, especially inland, dust is of 40 mph. something to consider if you are travelling. you can see quite nicely on the pressure chart why that is happening. look at the squeeze on those isobars, weather fronts coming in from the west will introduce some rain from scotland, northern ireland and later north—west england. high pressure in charge of the whether further southmead settled, sunny and dry. so after a dry start for scotland and northern ireland in northern england, we are looking at that rain coming in from the north—west, some
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of it heavy, and don't forget it is also going to be windy here as well. later we will see the rain getting into cumbria, but the rest of england and wales, we are looking at dry and fine conditions. temperatures up to 17 in the south, to about 13 or 14 in the north. now, as we head on through the evening and overnight, we will still have that rain across scotland, sinking a little bit further south across northern ireland, getting and across parts of cumbria again. a bit lighter and the same per north—west wales. the rest of the uk, it will be dry, there will be some shallow nest and fog forming, and generally it will not be as cold night as the one that has just gone. it will still be pretty windy, though, across the northern half of the country, especially so the north—west. so that leads us into tomorrow. for northern ireland, north—west england and scotland it will be cloudy. we will have rain across northern and central scotland, for the rest of the uk, again, dry and sunny, with temperatures continuing to climb. and then, by the time we get to thursday, we are looking at a new
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weather front coming across the north—west of scotland, introducing rain. as it sinks south across scotland, northern ireland and northern england, it won't be much more than a band of cloud. maybe some patchy light rain and drizzle on it. behind it will feel that the cooler. highs of nine across the far north of scotland, ahead of it we are in the milder and dry air with sunshine, and temperatures could get up sunshine, and temperatures could get up to 22 or 23 in east anglia and the south—east. as we head into the weekend, although it will be dry for most of us, what you will find is it is also going to be a few degrees cooler as well. i bet you are good at scrabble, are you? well, i haven't played it for awhile.” at scrabble, are you? well, i haven't played it for awhile. i bet she has secret words. lots of people getting in contact with us about scrabble. the reason we are talking about scrabble is because 300 new words have been added to the scrabble dictionary. steph says she a lwa ys scrabble dictionary. steph says she always has arguments in herfamily about whether the word is acceptable or not. you can now have emoji,
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twerk, frowny, and eu, the all—important twerk, frowny, and eu, the all—importa nt two letter word. more than 6.5 million counterfeit goods have been detained since 2015, according to national trading standards, and in that year number of items stopped at the uk border more than doubled. breakfast‘s tim muffett has been to the port of felixstowe, where they check for unsafe and illegal goods. the consumers, particularly in the uk, want it cheap and they want it now. which helps explain why fill in the team at felixstowe are so busy. it is the uk's biggest container port, handling more than 10,000 everyday —— phil. port, handling more than 10,000 everyday -- phil. we are looking to see if the products conform to
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european and british safety standards. so these are the three and one laser and led light. there is no labelling on it, there is no warning, you don't know what strength the laser is. you can accidentally shooting your eye, cause blindness. she doesn't always mean unsafe, but it is an indicator that we look at. the number of u nsafe that we look at. the number of unsafe or non—compliant goods being stopped at the uk border has risen rapidly. new figures show that, since 2015, more than 6.5 million items have been detained, in one year alone, the number of goods being stopped by authorities more than doubled. the uk has the fastest growing online marketplace of anywhere in europe. your laptop or your phone is your shop window, and your phone is your shop window, and you can't be certain who you are buying from. the seller may be based anywhere else in the world, and what we are finding is goods like electrical items that explode, there have been fires, there have been personal injuries. last year in the
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uk, more than 4.5 thousand domestic fires were caused by faulty electrical appliances —— 4500. according to government figures. in tests, this counterfeit cable gave off toxic smoke within two minutes off toxic smoke within two minutes of exposure to flames. fake fire blankets, which didn't put out fire, we re blankets, which didn't put out fire, were recently detained by the team at felixstowe. and while those in the uk try doing —— trying to import counterfeit goods can face large fines or even prison, tackling the source of the problem is often harder. the company in china which is trying to bring these products into the uk, is there anything you can do? at the minute, no. opening, checking, and if necessary confiscating. at the uk's biggest container port, phil and his team face an almighty challenge. tim joins us on the sofa. so what are your top tips? it is interesting, because we all love a
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bargain, buti interesting, because we all love a bargain, but i have been speaking to the consumer group which, trading standards, and to get some tips we can think about when we are shopping online as to how to avoid buying counterfeit items. the first one we can probably file on the common sense. if something seems too good to be true, if it is suspiciously cheap, then it most probably is a counterfeit item, well worth avoiding. if you are seeing a brand of goods on sale at a rock bottom price of a website you probably don't recognise it is properly worth avoiding. as i say, file at one under commonsense. what about the packaging and logos? pre— internet shopping, if you are in a shop or market place you could look at packaging and if it didn't feel right, you could avoid it. online that can be harder to do. so when you get the item, if it is an expensive item wrapped up in cheap packaging, that can also be a red flag bearer as well. also, electrical goods, toys, and many others, need to have a ce logo if they are sold across the eu. this is an indication that certain safety standards have been met, although
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interestingly the team at felixstowe say that sometimes the ce logo is put on illegally itself, an indication of the challenge, but it isa sign indication of the challenge, but it is a sign that certain safety standards have been met as well. it is worth looking at the reviews of other customers of the seller who is doing the selling, notjust the seller themselves but also the product they are selling to see if they have been any problems there. finally, common sense, really, bad spelling and grammar on a website are spelling and grammar on a website a re often spelling and grammar on a website are often a red flag that it isn't as it should be. and if you have got some good then you think a discount of it, what do you do? good question. the big online retailers often have the means by which you can register that something is not quite right. i spoke to ebay yesterday in a city of london majority of the 1 billion goods on sale are from legitimate sellers but they have a specialist team looking to re m ove they have a specialist team looking to remove any dodgy sellers from their site as well. they take it very seriously, as do all the major online retailers. if it is a smaller website, again it gets more tricky. best to contact trading standards. city of london police set up a
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special team in 2013 and since then they have closed down 50,000 websites which they believe were selling counterfeit goods. so it is an indication of the scale of the problem. if you think it is a victimless crime, they say you can actually be funding crime by buying counterfeit goods and they can be potentially dangerous. as we saw in the report, some of these items, especially electrical goods, can cause fire. and make-up, for example, can cause allergies. there are reminders today that you need to really think carefully when you buy these things. thank you very much for investigating. time now to get the news, travel and weather where you are. comeback if you have ever wondered how many spines there are average hedgehog. good morning, i'm asad ahmad. a teenager from fulham who died after a severe allergic reaction to a baguette bought from a shop at heathrow airport pleaded
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with her father to save her. natasha ednan—laperouse became ill a short time after eating the sandwich from pret a manger. she died hours later, despite her father administering two epipen injections. a coroners court heard the baguette contained sesame, which natasha was allergic to, but the ingredient wasn't listed on the packaging. and seperately, allergy sufferers who keep an epipen in case of emergency, are warned that they are in short supply. the jabs are used to treat people going into anaphylactic shock, but supplies of the medication are affected due to manufacturing issues in the us. child versions of the injectors are currently said to be even more scarce. we had a situation only last week where a prescription was printed for two pens for a disabled child, and we were unable to get it. the medication's expiring at the end of the month, and the parents are saying, what do i do? so as i said, i told them to hang onto their pen,
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not to dispose of it, and hoping that the situation is resolved quite soon. londoners are being urged not to succumb to fast fashion, and instead recycle their clothes more, as well as wear the ones in their wardrobes. the fashion recycling charity traid has found a quarter of londoners throw clothes in the bin rather than recycle them. a similar number buy new clothes every month. london already has the worst recycling record in the country, but the charity believes our fashion carbon footprint can be massively reduced. let's have a look at the travel situation now. there is a good service on the tubes this morning. on the roads, the a13 is slow into town towards the lodge avenue flyover. while in morden, bishopsford road is closed both ways between the rose hill roundabout and lillieshall road because of a serious accident. finally, in limehouse, the a101 is down to a single lane into town at the a13 because of a breakdown.
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let's have a check on the weather now, with elizabeth rizzini. so there's a cold start to what will be a very pretty day of weather. it should stay dry. there'll be lots of blue sky and sunshine around to enjoy. very similar to how it was yesterday, in fact, when we got 16.5 degrees celsius in central london. we're expecting something similar again today, matching those temperatures or perhaps even nudging a bit higher, between 15 and 17 celsius. just a light breeze, and many of us will stay completely cloud—free for much of the day. now, through this evening and overnight, we're going to keep those clear skies, and with light winds there'll probably be, again, a few shallow mist patches forming. but temperatures won't be quite as low tonight as they were last night. so we're looking at starting off the day tomorrow between about four and eight celsius, so still a fairly
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chilly start to the day, but not as cold as it was last night. again, tomorrow, more sunshine around. temperatures creeping just that little bit higher, 21 degrees. but look at this — thursday 23 celsius, pleasantly warm in the sunshine. i'm back with the latest from the bbc london newsroom in half an hour. hello, this is breakfast with louise minchin and dan walker. here's a summary of this morning's main stories from bbc news. labour's divisions over brexit could be further exposed today as members vote on whether to leave open the possibility of campaigning for another referendum. meanwhile, the shadow brexit secretary sir keir starmer, will use his speech at the party's conference to confirm that labour is preparing to vote down any deal the government manages to secure with the european union. eu migrants should not be given preferential treatment in the government's immigration system after brexit, ministers have agreed. the cabinet announced that highly—skilled workers should be prioritised and people coming to the uk to live and work would be subject to the same rules wherever they're from. ministers will set out further details later this year. dup leader arlene foster will give evidence today at the public inquiry into
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the renewable heat incentive scheme, which is being investigated after it reportedly cost the tax payer up to £500 million. we'rejoined now from belfast by our ireland correspondent, chris page. it looks to be a challenging day for arlene foster ahead. that's right. 20 months after the result government that collapsed, the main thing going on inside the building itself is this public enquiry into all things, the green energy scheme has played a large part. the question the enquiry is looking at is how that scheme ran up a projected overspend of several 100 million, that has been reduced by they to cut. the way the scheme work, it was designed to encourage businesses to switch from fossil fuels to more environmentally friendly energy sources, but the subsidies on offer were greater than the cost of the green fuels. that
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meant the more people earned, the more they burned, there was that of payments and the budget spiralled out of control. soap arlene foster is testifying before the public enquiry today. so far over the ten months it has been operating, the enquiry has heard claims that the people would call advisers made most of the decisions instead of politicians. it is the minister in charge of the scheme said the party was trying to smear him and mrs foster in a written statement has said that if certain it was going on. could talk you. thank you for that. —— good to talk to you. three people in the us, all paralysed from the waist down, have been able to walk again with the aide of an electrical implant. doctors used an electrode to stimulate nerves in the spinal cord to help overcome the injuries. experts say the device helps lost signals from the brain reach the leg muscles but also warn the research is still in its early stages. here's a unique way to deal with unwanted hold—ups at the airport.
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when a flight to venice was delayed by an hour, members of the camerata of lee—man orchestra decided to treat their fellow passengers with an impromptu concert in the middle of geneva airport. they kept everyone entertained until the flight took off. it also shows you the benefit of having slightly larger hand luggage. coming up on the programme, carol will have all the weather but first sally is here with the sport. it is freezing. i have made it in and someone who will be travelling with hand luggage only will be tiger woods. i will fix my microphone...
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technical skills and everything. can hear me now? at is howl technical skills and everything. can hear me now? at is how i am meant to talk. —— that. hear me now? at is how i am meant to talk. -- that. sorry. i dipped into my father making the watch films when i was younger. let's get to another one of your great memories. cani another one of your great memories. can i salute tiger's sunglasses? they are whoppers. guess what, we can recognise you, we know it is you. all attention is on the ryder cup which begins on friday. both the us and europe teams arrived in paris yesterday. woods doesn't have a great record as a player but he was a vice—captain for the americans' victory last time out, and this year's captain is very happy to have tiger on this team. when you look at now comparing past ryder cups to this one, i think what is so special is that tiger has
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ingrained himself in our team atmosphere and become such a big part of the team in 2016 as a vice captain, and then again in 2017 as assistant captain of the presidents cup. i think it is special for him now to join these younger players as a teammate. and in the spirit of rory mcilroy‘s fresh prince look, the european captain thomas bjorn is also as cool as a cucumber. he says they'll face "one of the strongest american teams of all time", but they're showing no fear. we don't fear anyone because we played against them so many times before individually, but we respect our opponents and know what we are up against. that is the key to all of this. we will go out and do what we can and play our game. on the other side, we know is one of the strong this american teams of all time and we know we have got to play our best. they have just got to play their
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best. the croatia midfielder luka modric was named as the best male player at the best fifa football awards in london. he beat cristiano ronaldo and mo salah to the honour, recognition for his contribution as real madrid won their third champions league title in a row in may and croatia reached their first world cup final in the summer. to win so many trophies with madrid, with croatia as a captain, reach the world cup final to win some individual awards, has been amazing. it is difficult to find the words to describe how good a year it was and just really amazing. brazil and orlando pride striker marta was named the women's world player of year. it's the sixth time she's won the award. liverpool's mo salah picked up the puskas award for goal of the year for his strike against everton last december, fending off gareth bale
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and cristiano ronaldo for the trophy. ronaldo has, of course, won the most presigious award in football — the ballon d'or — five times, in fact. and this year, for the first time, there'll also be a women's winner. france football magazine, which runs the award, said creating the prize was a "logical step" given the growing popularity of the women's game. cricket australia say they've found no new information on claims one of their players racially abused england's moeen ali during the 2015 ashes. the allegation was investigated at the time, but has been re—examined after moeen wrote about it in his new book. the australian board has now closed the matter. if you need an uplift today. if you need to feel a little bit positive going into your day today. listened to this. —— listen. watch as malea emma, seven years old, stunned a crowd with her rendition
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of the ‘star spangled banner‘ before la galaxy's 3—0 win. the major league soccer club described it as one of the best national anthem performances in history. let's have a listen. screaming. i can't even do it. my voice is on the way out. a bit of gravel. how did she go so high? and on and on. i think she has a future. dear member frank gribben singing it? that is my favourite. how do you have time for all of this? i don't know so how
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does he retain it all? he comes on and since all of the wrong words. hedgehog numbers have been in decline over recent years and with winter on the way, it's due to be another struggle for survivial for the spiky creatures. breakfast‘s john maguire is at a wildlife sanctuary in somerset where they're asking for help to care for sick and injured animals. 0h oh my goodness, you have been on feeding and snuggling duty. oh my goodness, you have been on feeding and snuggling dutym oh my goodness, you have been on feeding and snuggling duty. it is cute. this hedgehog, along with something like 50 others that they have got here at the animal century has had a bit of a hard time. do in a much about what has happened to this one? this is one that got
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caught ina this one? this is one that got caught in a drain. it was caught and we had to go and get it out. he has been with us for a couple of week 's. they don't like the modern world. we said before we came on air, i remember as world. we said before we came on air, i rememberas a kid you world. we said before we came on air, i remember as a kid you would see them every day but i cannot see the last time i saw one. we are doing everything that is wrong. roadkill was large thing when there we re roadkill was large thing when there were more of them. slug pellets, artificial grass, people are doing that to save on cutting the grass. even worse is the fences they are putting up in these new housing estates. that doesn't give them a corridor to move from one place to another. a lot of it man—made problems. what can we do to help? you are appealing for catfood? when we get a lot of them like we have in now, we need catfood and cat diskettes, which is good for their
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teeth. we have to buy a lot of mealworms because it is similar to natural food and it cost an awful lot of money. we had a lot of these during the summer with the drought, but come winter we will expect about 200 in. the dry summer would have made the ground hard? they did into the ground and get runs and things at. they are hedgehogs, a little pit} at. they are hedgehogs, a little pig. they use their noses to route around and find worms and insects. when people have vegetable gardens, that was ideal because there was different bugs and things for them to get. these days we just like nice, tidy gardens but it is not good for wildlife. we have quite a few here, one has hidden under a towel. we have managed to get our friend here to unravel him from his board, talking about the spikes for protection. pacing systems —— susceptible to diseases. —— they
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seem. ring worm and worms when in the autumn when they come in. is quite ironic that they are speaking thatis quite ironic that they are speaking that is disappearing and yet there seems to be so many of them coming in to care. this is giving us a lovely example of how they curl into a ball for protection. a lovely muscle that pulls up inside a. do they know how many spines?” muscle that pulls up inside a. do they know how many spines? i read on they know how many spines? i read on the same website 6000, between five and 7000. you are absolutely right. keep up the good work. 97% decline we think in hedgehogs since the 19505, we think in hedgehogs since the 1950s, when i was a lad. not so many around these days but there is a way you can help. we will stick that in social media as well, if you would be so kind to give you an idea of what you can do to help the poor old
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hedgehog. he is looking pretty content this morning. back to you guys. lovely to see the hedgehog bear and i have ever seen lovely to see the hedgehog bear and i have ever seen one lovely to see the hedgehog bear and i have ever seen one in my garden. ya been lucky enough. i spotted one andi ya been lucky enough. i spotted one and i went inside to get water and it toddled off. handy advice because asjohn were saying, and massive reduction and we will put out on social media. if you find one in your garden or you see someone and your garden or you see someone and you want to help, then we can try to solve that for you. now to someone who is never prickly, ever. good morning to you. it is a cracking morning for some of us this morning, albeit chilly under the clear skies. but the sun is up in the south of the country is looking at another dry and sunny day. in the north, after a chilly start it is a different story. for you we have some rain coming in from the west, and it will be accompanied by gusty winds. generally winds of about 40
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mph inland, 60 with exposure across the western isles and the far west of scotland. you can see with the pressure chart what is happening. high pressure is keeping a weather settled across southern areas, and in northern areas we have a clutch of weather fronts coming our way, introducing rain after a dry start. the squeeze on the isobars tells you it will be windy. after the dry start for scotland, northern ireland and north—west england, we will see the rain coming and it will be a gusty day. gusty winds. whereas for the rest of england, the north—east and further south and all of wales, any showery mist and fog patches left will clear quite rapidly now and the sun will come out if it isn't already for you, which are probably already is. temperatures up to 17 in the south, 14 or 15 in the north. through the evening and overnight, the rain will continue across scotland and northern ireland, sinking down into the north—west of england, possibly as far south as the north—west of wales
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as well. for the rest of england and wales, we are looking at a largely dry night. some shallow mist and fog patches forming and not as cold night as the one that has just gone. so tomorrow, for northern ireland, northern england and scotland, it will be cloudy with some rain, heaviest of which will be across scotland. still quite windy as well, but for the rest of england and wales, another dry and sunny day and the little bit warmer. temperatures up the little bit warmer. temperatures up to 20 notjust in the south of england and wales, but somewhere like aberdeen could hit 20. on thursday and new weather front coming in across the north—west will introduce some rain but as it south across scotland, northern ireland and northern england it weakens into and northern england it weakens into a band of cloud with some patchy light rain on it. behind its fresher conditions coming our way, but ahead of it dry and sunny and a wee bit warmer. highs of around 23, for example, across east anglia and the south—east. into the weekend, it will be drierfor south—east. into the weekend, it will be drier for most of us and we
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are looking at the temperatures taking a wee bit of a tumble. we will see you in about half an hour or so. lovely and sunny, gorgeous light on you, carol. the uk's skincare, cosmetics and healthcare market was worth more than £7 billion last year. steph is taking a look at the business of beauty this morning, and she has got a big—name guest with her. steph. good morning to you both. we are joined by charlotte tilbury. she made her name as a makeup artist to the stars, and became so famous she used her name to launch a business. five years later, it is one of the fastest—growing makeup brands in the world. it is very lovely to have you here. thank you forjoining us. yes, wonderful to be here. thank you forjoining us. yes, wonderfulto be here. can you tell us how you came to set up the
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business? you were a make—up artist at the age of eight, and became famous at that and turned it into a big business brand.” famous at that and turned it into a big business brand. i think what i saw is as wide space in the market of wanting to bottle all of my secrets, tips and tricks from the red carpet on the runways and being able to give that to women around the world and democratise make—up. so many women would say to me how did you do that look you did on kate moss orjennifer aniston. and i was like, i felt frustrated moss orjennifer aniston. and i was like, ifelt frustrated because there were a lot of formulas on the market which were not quite good enough, and to be able to create that kind of instagram filter skin, or get rid of... you know, the perfect cream to give you the kind of base for make—up, the perfect lipstick colours. so i realised that there were these social archetypes of looks that celebrities and runway models did, and women were saying you can't possibly achieve those looks, i felt frustrated that people can, and!
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looks, i felt frustrated that people can, and i wanted to give everyone the expertise of these make—up wardrobes i had created for these celebrities, and create really easy to use formulas, easy to choose and easy to use. so others saying i can't do a smoky eye, and i thought, yes you can. i will create products, because what i found this when women are using an eyeshadow, and it falls halfway down my face, i looked at the formula and it wasn't well blended enough, and the fact is a woman was feeling disempowered that she could do a smoky eye, but when you gave her the right formula, it wouldn't drop, and she thought, oh, my god, that is amazing. so making women feel they can achieve those looks as well was very important to me. and i realised this space in the market, that women felt disempowered, they didn't know what to use, and 50% of women in england do not engage with make—up because they don't know what to choose or what to use. places like hollywood and the fashion industry have understood that for a very long
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time, the power of make up. so what was it like actually setting up the business? there must have been challengers entering a market where there is already such big players. everyone was asking why i would start a branded such an overcrowded market, and i said actually, there isa market, and i said actually, there is a need. and wherever there is a need, necessity is the mother of all invention. so when i launched the brand in selfridges, i had 200 people queueing from day one, and thatis people queueing from day one, and that is because this whole easy to choose, easy to use, giving people the locks, and then also it was the whole kind of mentality that i really used social media, and i kept thinking how can i put myself inside someone's make—up bag was that i am one person, i want to give myself to the world, i have given myself to all of these amazing celebrities who have wrought in client so it is really about bottling myself in the product and really thinking about also how we can be on thatjourney
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with somebody, of, you know, holding their hand all the way home, whether it was me kind of being on the youtube, where i am doing this sort of brush along with you first thing in the morning when you are doing your make—up, and the entire retail experience from buying the product to getting at home and putting it on, iwas to getting at home and putting it on, i was there with you the whole way. when you go into a shop and see all the different types of make up, the price is very wildly as well. how do you decide what your price will be? some people say they are quite pricey. my whole thing is about creating affordable luxury as much as i can. the product for me is king. i have to deliver the most innovative, the most brilliant, the best products in the world. when i launched this brand i wanted to create products which are not me too products, which are better than anything on the market, otherwise i am not going to do them. i havejust launched a concealer, it has taken me 26 years to create this concealer because it magics away redness,
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pigmentation, all of those things. it has taken 26 years to produce. so how did you decide the price of that? how i decide the how did you decide the price of that? how! decide the price is i think of the formula, the innovation, and i work back from no matter how much it costs, how cheap cani matter how much it costs, how cheap can i make it for the consumer? it costs a lot it was the innovation sometimes is quite pricey, and that i take it down and i make it as cheap as i possibly can for the consumer, because i want everyone to have it. i work it back and try to keep the margins are as low as possible so i can give it to everybody around the world. we we talk about the retail a lot on the challenges the sector is having, particularly the physical, high—street stores. particularly the physical, high-street stores. you decided to open stores on the high street. how important is that to your business? i think the high street to survive, andi i think the high street to survive, and i think it will, i think they have to think about theatre, retail theatre, bringing back fun. what i did was! theatre, bringing back fun. what i did was i brought the backstage to the front stage. i went into the beauty halls and i felt they had
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lost a little bit of their fun and their magic, and i thought i want people to enter my kind of beauty world of these backstage areas of me being in hollywood or wherever i am, and bring that theatre. i have things like the magic mirror. you can come to my counter and look in the mirror and you can see the make—up painted on yourface digitally in the mirror, so you can become the rock chick, you can become the rock chick, you can become the rock chick, you can become the golden goddess. and having artistic expertise, and a lot of make—up is about a sensorial experience, so you can't experience that so much online. and i think the more fun that you create, a reason to drive people into the stores. but i think now women are shopping in and only channel way. i think they are shopping in the stores and online, so they might be replenishing online, they might be kind of learning make—up tutorial online. so they will be shopping in different ways at different touch points throughout their their day. and what would be your advice to anyone you who has a great business idea? dared to dream it, dare to believe it, and dare to do it. and
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give a woman the right make—up and she can conquer the world. you should have seen how excited our make—up team was coming in, practically stalking charlotte, they were. for weeks that has been the case. thank you very much indeed. that is very good advice. steph was telling us earlier she is a scrabble champion in her household. ijust said i enjoy i just said i enjoy the ijust said i enjoy the game, i didn't say i was a champion, don't start upping the stakes! for the wordsmiths among you, we are looking for help with triple letter score suggestions as we continue our game of scrabble. 300 new words have been added to the game's official dictionary, including arancini, facepalm and puggle — a cross between a pug and a beagle, and later in the programme, we will speak to linguistics expert rob drummond about how language has evolved.
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i have a bit of facepalm action, let me finish off facepalm before you go. other words yowza, me finish off facepalm before you go. otherwords yowza, emoji has been allowed. time now to get the news, travel and weather where you are. it is quite hard to the upsidedown scrabble. twerk, i have done it! live twerking on bbc breakfast. good morning from bbc london news. a teenager from fulham who died after a severe allergic reaction to a baguette bought from a shop at heathrow airport pleaded with her father to save her. natasha ednan—laperouse became ill a short time after eating the sandwich from pret a manger. she died hours later, despite her father administering two epipen injections. a coroners court heard the baguette contained sesame, which natasha was allergic to, but the ingredient wasn't listed on the packaging. and seperately, allergy sufferers
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who keep an epipen in case of emergency are warned that they are in short supply. the jabs are used to treat people going into anaphylactic shock, but supplies of the medication are affected due to manufacturing issues in the us. child versions of the injectors are currently said to be even more scarce. we had a situation only last week where a prescription was printed for two pens for a disabled child, and we were unable to get it. the medication's expiring at the end of the month, and the parents are saying, what do i do? so as i said, i told them to hang onto their pen, not to dispose of it, and hoping that the situation is resolved quite soon. londoners are being urged not to succumb to fast fashion, and instead recycle their clothes more, as well as wear the ones in their wardrobes. the fashion recycling charity traid has found a quarter of londoners throw clothes in the bin rather than recycle them. a similar number buy new clothes every month. london already has the worst recycling record in the country,
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but the charity believes our fashion carbon footprint can be massively reduced. let's have a look at the travel situation now. there is a good service on the tubes this morning. on the roads, the a13 is slow into town towards the lodge avenue flyover. while in morden, bishopsford road is closed both ways between the rose hill roundabout and lillieshall road because of a serious accident. finally, in limehouse, the a101 is down to a single lane into town at the a13, because of a breakdown. let's have a check on the weather now, with elizabeth rizzini. so there's a cold start to what will be a very pretty day of weather. it should stay dry. there'll be lots of blue sky and sunshine around to enjoy. very similar to how it was yesterday, in fact, when we got 16.5 degrees celsius in central london.
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we're expecting something similar again today, matching those temperatures or perhaps even nudging a bit higher, between 15 and 17 celsius. just a light breeze, and many of us will stay completely cloud—free for much of the day. now, through this evening and overnight, we're going to keep those clear skies, and with light winds there'll probably be, again, a few shallow mist patches forming. but temperatures won't be quite as low tonight as they were last night. so we're looking at starting off the day tomorrow between about four and eight celsius, so still a fairly chilly start to the day, but not as cold as it was last night. again, tomorrow, more sunshine around. temperatures creeping just that little bit higher, 21 degrees. but look at this — thursday 23 celsius, pleasantly warm in the sunshine. va nessa vanessa feltz is on bbc radio london with her breakfast show. i'm back with the latest from the bbc london newsroom in half an hour. good morning and welcome to breakfast with louise
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minchin and dan walker. our headlines today: labour says it will vote against any deal offered to the prime minister on brexit if it fails to meet their six key tests. theresa may strikes a deal with her cabinet on immigration. ministers agree there'll be no special treatment for eu citizens after the uk leaves. three paralysed patients walk again with the help of a revolutionary electrical implant. tv on demand. from today, television programme ratings will be broken down to show exactly how many people watch on modern devices as well as traditional sets. the excitement is building. after completing one of sport's greatest comebacks — tiger roars into paris for the ryder cup. not long to go. we'll hear from jodie whittaker on the red carpet ahead of the new dr who. you are looking up to the doctor who
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represents something for everyone. it isa represents something for everyone. it is a restart for many of us. increasing amounts of cloud and windy conditions. i will have more in15 windy conditions. i will have more in 15 minutes. it's tuesday 25th september. our top story: the shadow brexit secretary sir keir starmer has told breakfast this morning that labour is preparing to vote down any deal the government secures with the european union that doesn't meet the pa rty‘s six key tests. labour's divisions over brexit could be further exposed today as members vote on whether to leave open the possibility of campaigning for another referendum. we can speak now to our political correspondent iain watson who is at the labour conference in liverpool.
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what is most significant? several things. confirming that almost no matter what theresa may does that the labour opposition will vote down any deal that comes back from brussels is significant. six tests that apparently she had to pass, effectively created for the opposition to feel those tests. virtually anything theresa may does she cannot pass labour's tests on jobs and the economy. we will see the prospect of any final deal that theresa may has being voted down so long as keir starmer and the labour front bench and get their mps onside and get some conservatives to join them. secondly, after confusion yesterday about exactly what would happen if labour keeps the option of a referendum open, keir starmer told us that the option of remaining in the european union had not been
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ruled out. the whole labour party is united around the motion going forward this morning and that is clear that the question is open and nothing is being rolled out including the option of remain. you're going to see the whole of the labour party united about that position and that is quite something contrasted with what you're going to probably see next week at the tory party conference. he claims his party conference. he claims his party is united and he wants to turn his fire on the conservatives, but they are united in trying to fall down theresa may's deal, united in saying they want the option of having a public vote, what the rest of us would call a referendum. there might be disunity on what the question in the referendum should be and there was a difference in emphasis from the shadow chancellor
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who said it should be on the final deal and from keir starmer and others who said the option to remain should be on the future ballot paper if we get that far. there are quite a few hurdles to overcome between now and then. the government are making clear what would happen to eu citizens after brexit. yes. they took a decision that cabinet on the basis of expert advice that in the future the migration system after brexit would be based on skills and not nationality, no special treatment for eu citizens. that is the topline agreement but beneath the topline agreement but beneath the surface there is more wriggle room. people in government suggesting that perhaps they could have some form of light touch migration for people from the european union so long as this is pa rt european union so long as this is part of the wider trade deal. no longer going to offer something for nothing, no free movement, but there
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could be easier migration or later checks if the european union is willing to give that elusive trade deal to theresa may. they say it is not special treatment because similar arrangements might be on offer to other countries such as the united states if britain gets an ambitious trade deal with donald trump. theresa may and president trump will both attend the united nations annual meeting in new york today, using the opportunity to raise concerns with president rouhani, over ongoing tensions with iran. mrs may will press for the release of the british—iranian charity worker nazanin zaghari—ratcliffe, who has been imprisoned in tehran since 2016 on charges of spying, which she denies. three people in the us, all paralysed from the waist down, have been able to walk again with the aid of an electrical implant. doctors used an electrode to stimulate nerves in the spinal cord to help overcome the injuries. experts say the device helps lost
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signals from the brain reach the leg muscles, as our health and science correspondent james gallagher reports. kelly thomas thought this would be impossible. it has been four years since she was paralysed from the waist down in a car accident. now, she can walk again, thanks to an implant in her spine and months of gruelling exercises. one day they were helping me, as usual, and then they stopped helping me and i took maybe three or four steps in sequence and i just stopped and my lips started quivering and my ears, my face got hot and my eyes got teary. i was like "oh my god, thatjust happened, i just took steps." kelly still needs a frame for balance, but says regaining movement has transformed her life. and she is not alone. jeff marquis was paralysed in a mountain biking accident, his spinal cord injury was stopping messages from his brain reaching his legs.
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jeff's implant electrically stimulates his lower spinal cord to help it pick up the faintest messages that are still getting through. teams of researchers at the university of louisville and the mayo clinic have used this technology to help three people walk again. kelly is using the implants in her daily life and has plans of ditching the frame, too. but this is not a miracle cure for paralysis, it is still unclear why it works for some patients and not others. but it is another sign of the huge steps being made to treat this most life changing of injury. the hit bbc series doctor who quickly developed a cult following when it first aired in 1963, as millions of us were gripped by the sci—fi adventures of the extra—terrestrial timelord. now, 55 years later, it welcomes the first female to the lead role, with the arrival ofjodie whittaker
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as the 13th doctor. our entertainment correspondent lizo mzimba has more. alien worlds, the past, the future. so far, so familiar, but the new doctor who also has perhaps a more contemporary feel. the show‘s launch was in sheffield, a key location in the new series. which is of course also making history with jodie whittaker, the first woman to play the doctor. it is really emotional because when i was younger the characters that i wanted to be were, 90% of the time, portrayed by the boys. so, for some young kids now to realise that you can look up to women, you can look up to men, but essentially you are looking up to the doctor, who is an alien and represents something for everyone. jodie whittaker‘s casting lead to headlines all around the world, but the show‘s aim to become more
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inclusive has gone on behind the camera as well. on the writing and directing team there are more women, more people of colour, all bringing the episodes to life. it is important it is a show for everyone, it's inclusive for everybody regardless of gender or heritage. it is a big, inclusive show and doctor who is about celebrating life and the universe and being alive and that sense of adventure is absolutely open to all. to work best for audiences, doctor who, of course, has to have stories that excite viewers of all ages. the team is hoping that in its new home on sunday nights, it'll satisfy traditional viewers and bring in new ones too. you have been to talk to her. yes. she is pretty amazing. she is brilliant on what doctor who means to her. speaking on —— actor david
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tennant who she starred with in prod church. interesting story about how he did not know who the new doctor who was. talking about things that she is working on. she is a real laugh. ptsd, flashbacks and heightened anxiety are symptoms felt by some women who have gone through a traumatic birth. each year, its estimated around 20,000 women in the uk experience birth trauma, but little or nothing is often said about it. now, though, two women have made a short film about postnatal mental health based on their own experiences. nessa wrafter and kate magowan join us now. good morning. tell us about the film. what inspired you to make it?
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it was my personal experience. i suffered from trauma during my childbirth and following that i find myself having this really strange sense of anxiety, feeling like i was under water and i could not connect with my feelings. when you have a new baby that has a lot of expectation about feeling happy and if you do not feel like that it can feel scary because you're not sure what wrong with you. it is something i had never seen on film before and i thought it would make a great film. you also had... i do not know how you would describe it, dramatic? yes, the birth of my first child was traumatic for me. the care i received was second to none and the nhs saved my baby. i was left feeling traumatised by the whole
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experience. i was a feeling traumatised by the whole experience. i was a success feeling traumatised by the whole experience. i was a success story because my baby was healthy and yet i could not... ifelt completely lost and completely... i did not know what to do with the feelings. it did not turn into postnatal depression but it was trauma. in this clip we see the main character, kate, remembering her time in hospital. we are losing too much blood. what? i think she is hungry. who? florence. of course. thanks, dad.
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two litres. i am sure that resonates with lots of women watching. what has the reaction been? amazing. it is mind blowing when people come back to you with their stories. we have had a lot of that which is wonderful. a lot of women saying that maybe they had their children for two years ago and they connected with these themes. women who gave birth more recently who said they had suffered from varying degrees of postnatal mental health issues who said they could see themselves. lots of men who say they can understand this ina of men who say they can understand this in a new way now. my sister and my mother went through something similar. i particularly liked that
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there she was in this joyous situation but really feeling overwhelmed by difficult thoughts. that may be reflected in lots of people. it's quite isolating, you are in thisjoyful people. it's quite isolating, you are in this joyful situation where you have had the best outcome, you have a baby, you and your baby are healthy. so there is the pressure to be very, very happy, but sometimes that can be even more isolating. it is hard to express that to your partner or your parents, because they are really happy because they have had this lovely baby being brought into the world and you don't wa nt to brought into the world and you don't want to bring them down, maybe, so sometimes it can be much more helpful, for me,
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certainly, to speak to a midwife, somebody not connected to me in that emotional way. you say there has been a positive reaction from men watching it, kate. there was an all—female team working on a... almost. did you plan that will did that just come almost. did you plan that will did thatjust come about? about our incredible producer pulled together a team of mostly women. it ise female story, the female gaze, we opportunity to create a feminine environment. and for our actress, we we re environment. and for our actress, we were asking so much of her in terms of exposing her vulnerability and getting to a place emotionally that it is not easy to get to. she is a mum, and so i said from early on let's try to make this almost exclusively female, besides the fact that stats are not great for women in film so we thought we might redress the balance a little bit. an empowering situation all round, make things more nurturing. it has been collected for the cannes short film
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corner, it will be played at festivals and it is called early days. if you've been affected by any of the issues raised in this interview you can find help and support online via the bbc action line website, that's at bbc.co.uk/actionline. iam sure i am sure that will resonate with many of you this morning, get in touch with us on any of the issues this morning. on subjects like this there is often a really good debate which takes place on facebook both during and after the programme. go and have a little join during and after the programme. go and have a littlejoin in. during and after the programme. go and have a little join in. we will, don't worry! carol is on the roof at new broadcasting house with the weather for us this morning. hasn't it gone chile? it certainly has, especially in the shade. the sun was beating down on the roof earlier and it was warming up nicely, but we can feel the difference in the shade. ouite nicely, but we can feel the difference in the shade. quite a chilly start across many parts of the country, we have all started in single figures. in rural areas in
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the south many of us were hovering around freezing orjust below. in the north of the country it will be windy, gusts of wind generally 40 mph across parts of scotland, northern england and northern ireland, but in the west, so the western isles western scotland, could be as much as 60 mph. we will see some rain. we have fronts coming from the west bringing in the rain to the cause of the day after a largely dry start. but things are settled further south, dry and sunny. in northern ireland, scotland and north west england it is a dry start foremost, looking at increasing cloud amounts with the rain coming in. getting into cumbria much later in the day. don't forget the gusty winds. for north—east england and the rest of england and sunny with highs up to around 17 degrees. lower than that in the north. through the
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evening and overnight the cloud and rain continue, as will the wind, across scotland, northern ireland and north—west england. some of the rain later in the night getting as far south as northwest wales. for the rest of england and wales it will be dry and not as cold a night as the one just gone. any shallow mist and fog patches readily disposed tomorrow morning and for most of england and wales it will be another dry and sunny day with temperatures are bit higher than today. for northern ireland, parts of northern england and scotland, you will have the rain and a bit more cloud. it will brighten up a touch through the course of the day. aberdeen could still hit 20. a new weather fronts coming in across the north—west on thursday introduces some rain. it will not be much more than a band of clouds, maybe the odd spot of rain, but feeling fresher behind that. ahead of it in the warmer air, behind that. ahead of it in the warmerair, dry and behind that. ahead of it in the warmer air, dry and sunny conditions
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with highs in east anglia and the south—east of potentially 23 degrees. into the weekend, dry for most of us, temperatures tumbling a little. thank you. nice to see you. it looks lovely, even though it is cold. having a 'twerk‘ with your 'bestie' might make some people 'frowny‘ and even result in a 'facepalm'. that is really uncomfortable, isn't it?! what am i talking about? the wordsmiths among you may recognise just a few of the new words that can now win you extra points during a game of scrabble! you could not work on a scrabble board, but now you can! —— you could not twerk! 300 words have been added to the official scrabble dictionary — and we've been finding out what some avid board game players make of the new entries. i've not got a clue what puggle means. arancini, that's those little rice balls. puggle — half—pug, half—beagle, nothing to do with harry potter. emoji's quite a new word in the vocabulary, so it makes sense
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that'sjust been included now, same as facepalm. i still don't know what a puggle is. scrabble can be quite a complex game. it really shows your prowess with vocabulary, and things like that. i think if you simplify it or dumb it down with things like "ew," i think they're probably inappropriate for scrabble. aquafaba. i don't know what aquafaba means, that's a bit bizarre. aquafaba — i have no idea. i don't know that one. i like scrabble. it's harder than a normal game. love words. love a word, and now there's new ones. it's just a bit more challenging than connect four. so there is a healthy discussion about the new words. joining us now is linguist rob drummond. good morning, good to see you, and
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you play scrabble? i like a bit of scrabble. i am going to ask you if ew should be on? absolutely, if people are using the words, it is a good reflection of how language is changing. who even describes how ew is spelt? the people from the official scrabble dictionary get—together with a scrabble organisation, and, to be fair, with words like that mostly from spoken language, they had to decide, and onceit language, they had to decide, and once it is in the dictionary, that isa once it is in the dictionary, that is a good record of how it will be used and spelt and people will follow on. we mentioned a view words, like yowza, emoji, sheeple, thatis words, like yowza, emoji, sheeple, that is people who are docile or compliant... however seriously you
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ta ke compliant... however seriously you take the fact that scrabble by introducing new words, the fact it is happening is an example of how fluid language is and how much it changes. when new words coming, they are not making these words up, they have heard people are using these words. you like sheeple? definitely my favourite. why? i like it when it isa my favourite. why? i like it when it is a little bit clever, when two words have gone together, a bit of thought has gone into that one. so many people are contacting us talking about their favourite scrabble words and how much they enjoy playing at. as a linguist, does it make a difference to your understanding of words? often with things like countdown on television, it is words and numbers, it is a process rather than understanding words. do you separate that when you play? i think any word games are good. in particular, how scrabble
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works, it makes people think about how wordsjoin works, it makes people think about how words join together and you can make bigger words and it really gets people thinking. as a linguist, anything that gets people thinking about language and working with language, for me, has to be a good thing. and we lose words, they go out of use? yes, but words can into the dictionary with scrabble far more often than they are removed. i think the scrabble dictionary is a really nice record of some archaic words. so when you are playing with somebody who comes out with some really obscure words and you say you have never heard of it, it might be quite an old word. that is fair enough. one of the new words is puggle. enough. one of the new words is puggle, which i found out today is a cross between a pug and a beagle, but quite a few scottish viewers have got in touch. i remember that from reading the broons. one viewers
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says it is a where —— a way of describing somebody who is tired, for example, jings, i am quite puggled. and sometimes older people might complain that the new words are ruining the language and scrabble, but they are not, but it is nice that older people are embracing some of these new words like emoji. and arancini is an italian word, so are we now adopting words from other languages, is that fascinating to you? so many words in english are originally from other languages. we adopt them and anglicised them sometimes. and also on that subject, i think the nicest one is zen which has come in, people wondered why it has not come in
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before, it was so associated with zen before, it was so associated with zen buddhism, so it must have been a proper noun with a capital z, and you cannot have those. a former scrabble champion said the key is a lwa ys scrabble champion said the key is always the two letter word. when people are struggling to use their letters. so ew, and oi. any 0 people are struggling to use their letters. so ew, and oi. any o words without a u is very useful. there is the currency of azerbaijan. i have either just the currency of azerbaijan. i have eitherjust made that word bryce heem very clever! you are a linguist, so i will trust you. -- i have either just made linguist, so i will trust you. -- i have eitherjust made that word up ori have eitherjust made that word up or i seem very clever. there was something that should have been renamed for you, dan, something that should have been renamed foryou, dan, is it something that should have been renamed for you, dan, is it when you
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are tweeting and working?“ renamed for you, dan, is it when you are tweeting and working? if you get people using that, it will come into the dictionary and be traced back to this day. we have reinvented what twerking means. actually, we did not, that is one of your twitter followers. thank you so much coming m, followers. thank you so much coming in, iwill followers. thank you so much coming in, i will never play you would scrabble, i think you might be good for me. still to come on breakfast, equestrian world gold medallist ros canter raced to victory last week on her horse allstar b. appropriately named! ros will be here to tell us about winning individual and team gold in north carolina. sally has the sport in a moment, and then the headlines. time now to get the news, travel and weather where you are. it has been another chilly start to the day. most of england and wales starting with blue skies and
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sunshine. further north it will turn quite windy. the isobars are going to be squeezed across north—west areas. cloud and patchy rain moving through. for england and wales, fine and dry with lots of sunshine. still gusty in particular across the north and north—west of scotland. 50—60 mph this afternoon. feeling quite pleasa nt mph this afternoon. feeling quite pleasant further south with lighter winds. overnight we will have more cloud and patchy rain across the north and west of scotland. actually moving into the far north—west of england. temperatures in double figures but across the south it will be quite chilly. wednesday another
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sunny start across much of england and wales. more cloud across northern parts of england. showers and longer spells of rain in the west. temperatures 17—20. warmer for england and wales with temperatures in the 20s. this weather fronts sitting towards the north and associated cloud across southern parts. another fine and sunny day on thursday, warmer for many parts on thursday. except the far north where we will see sunshine breaking through and the cloud moving further south. this is business live from bbc news, with sally bundock and ben thompson.
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the end of their instagram story — the founders of the photo sharing website leave the firm six years after it was bought by facebook for $1 billion. live from london, that's our top story on tuesday 25th september. reports of disagreements with facebook‘s board and a desire to pursue other projects sees the co—founders bow out — we'll have more in a moment.
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