tv The Papers BBC News October 27, 2018 10:30pm-11:01pm BST
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in from the west and then things will start a little bit milder, more u nsettled will start a little bit milder, more unsettled through the middle part of the week. before that, don't forget if you are heading off to bed this evening to put the clocks back, the end of british summer time, we'll getan hour end of british summer time, we'll get an hour in bed but unfortunately nights will set in quickly. take care. anti—jewish hello, this is bbc news. we'll be taking a look at tomorrow mornings papers in a moment. first, the headlines. the helicopter belonging to leicester city's owner crashes outside the club's stadium. it's not known if he was on board at the time. in the us, 11 people have been killed and six injured in a shooting at a synagogue in the city of pittsburgh. oui’ our minds cannot comprehend the cruel hate and the twisted malice that could cause a person to unleashed such terrible violence
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during a baby—naming ceremony. former england footballer and manager glenn hoddle is taken to hospital afterfalling ill. here, the former cabinet minister lord hain says he stands by his decision to name sir philip green as the businessman facing allegations of sexual harassment and racial abuse, something he categorically denies. let's get more now on our breaking news. a helicopter belonging to the owner of leicester city football club has crashed in a car park outside the club's ground shortly after taking off. we've just had a statement from leicestershire police: "emergency services are currently dealing with an incident "at the king power stadium, in leicester, after an aircraft came "down in a car park behind the ground earlier this evening. "officers are working alongside the ambulance service, "leicester fire and rescue service, the air accident investigation "branch and leicester city football club to establish the exact "circumstances of the collision."
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joining us now isjohn butcher who has been at the king power stadium in leicester since the helicopter crash. john, did you see an hear the crash when it happened? we were actually ina barfacing when it happened? we were actually in a barfacing the stadium. we when it happened? we were actually in a bar facing the stadium. we saw a lot of fire engines came by as we came out to see what had happened. my came out to see what had happened. my nephew came running towards the and he was in a real state of shock. he said he had seen the helicopter spiral out of control and within a second, dropped like a stone to the floor. some eyewitnesses said they heard a grinding noise. is that what you have been told, too? yes, yes, that it's in. it was the propeller on the tail of the helicopter that seemed to lose power and then the helicopter just by ruled
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seemed to lose power and then the helicopterjust by ruled out of control —— spiralled out of control. this helicopter is a familiar sight to those at home games. yes, after every home game, we see the helicopter landing at the stadium. how many people were out in the car park when this happened? you would imagine it would be where people would congregate for collecting autographs and things like that. yes, luckily, this was a little while after the game ended. my nephew said luckily it did spiral for little while and everybody sort of ran sort of scattered so as far as we are aware, nobody around the car park was caught up in this. how quickly were the emergency services there? literally within a minute or two. really quick. very impressive response. two. really quick. very impressive response . because
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two. really quick. very impressive response. because it is city centre, hopefully they would be stationed fairly close by. of course, this will be immensely shocking to the fa ns will be immensely shocking to the fans of leicester city because we don't know yet whether the owner was on board but he has seen the club through some tremendous successes. yes, the family are held in respect by lester bands. we all appreciate what he has done for the club. thank you, john goodness, —— john what he has done for the club. thank you, john goodness, ——john butcher, an eyewitness when the helicopter came down. we will bring you more details on that story when we get them. coming up now, look at the papers. hello and welcome to our look ahead to what the the papers will be
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bringing us tomorrow. with me are susie boniface, who's a columnist for the daily mirror, and the broadcaster, penny smith. many of tomorrow's front pages are already in. the express pictures tonight's helicopter crash outside leicester city's football ground — the helicopter is owned by the club's owner. the observer claims government welfare reforms are fuelling a rise in homelessness across the country. the sunday telegraph looks at monday's budget — it reports government claims that hundreds of millions of pounds will be pumped into installing superfast broadband in some of the uk's most remote areas. billing an exclusive, the mail on sunday has an interview with sir philip green — who was named in the house of lords as the businessman at the centre of allegations of sexual and racial harrassment, claims which he denies. the topshop owner told the paper he has suffered the worst week of his life. let's make a start but the
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telegraph. looking ahead to the budget on monday to get the uk's broadband up to speed, it of a boost for infrastructure particular in rural areas. he is failing to point out it should be easier for us to do something that is merely the laying of cable. i living a rural area outside london, we have broadband, we have a think all the internet there. ido we have a think all the internet there. i do have to give it a kick a couple of times a week and sometimes in the garden a stern talking to. like the old dial—up days. in the garden a stern talking to. like the old dial-up days. at least you knew it was while it up. now you get the curly smell of doom. and it
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does mean the new way of working that we foresaw in the 21st century, more of us working from home, it makes it impossible, it really does. you are an older person as well and you can find the cheapest energy ta riffs you can find the cheapest energy tariffs when you go online and have pa perless tariffs when you go online and have paperless billing and you can't have — — a ccess paperless billing and you can't have —— access them if you can't have the internet. there are so many places, notjust internet. there are so many places, not just really remote, internet. there are so many places, notjust really remote, only slightly rural, where they don't have access and you don't have people who can manage to get online and don't have the facilities are capabilities. post offices closing down, libraries shutting down, these are places where people would go to get online. what he is saying here is that they are going to build these hubs in the libraries that don't exist any more and the post offices that have been shut down. i'm geta
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offices that have been shut down. i'm get a hat you stop you talking. he said residents and businesses will have to seek connections to their own homes. in other words, will have to seek connections to their own homes. in otherwords, pay to get better board man. i'm going to get better board man. i'm going to move you on to the observer for a couple of stories. i've got a statement from the dwp. they are saying this will put more pressure on philip hammond as he prepares to unveil the budget. they are saying the welfare reforms are fuelling a rise in homelessness in towns and cities across the country and they are saying in particular universal credit a factor in a third of its clients ending up in care and they are saying not only is it is admitted and contributor to both invisible homelessness which is when people go sofa surfing but also living in emergency accommodation and rough sleeping, it is not working, they should stop it, they roll it out, everywhere it goes,
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there are problems. the housing minister has said we are investing £1.2 billion to tackle all forms of homelessness and our homelessness reduction act will ensure more people are wild. —— ensure more people are wild. —— ensure more people are wild. —— ensure more people are helped. we were to support people to move into a home and support themselves through work. once you have got a home, easier to get a job. once you have got a home, easier to get ajob. despite once you have got a home, easier to get a job. despite what the dwp manages to say which is often kafka —esque in its madness doesn't stop the fact that we can see there are more homeless people on the streets. and there are more there than i have ever seen and there are more there than i have everseen in my life. and there are more there than i have ever seen in my life. they have known about the problems with universal credit. more than six years, they know in areas where it has been rolled out, food bank goes up has been rolled out, food bank goes up by has been rolled out, food bank goes up by 52%. they are talking about pausing it. the other one on the
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observer, ourjustice pausing it. the other one on the observer, our justice is pausing it. the other one on the observer, ourjustice is done can't cope, too much data to crunch. yes and no. if there is any kind of court case these days, it involves ipad, iphones, and it involves the process of disclosure we have to prepare with each side who has got what data and you have to download that in to a format where it has to be presented and it is a long drawn—out business. be presented and it is a long drawn-out business. they are saying it is such a long drawn—out thing that one recent case took six and the police hours to go through the digital material. it takes 15 office rs digital material. it takes 15 officers working all weekend to get the information and police are struggling with outdated technology and at risk of becoming irrelevant and at risk of becoming irrelevant and that is scary. it is a bit. without that disclosure, you have trials collapsing. let's move you on to the express and a story we have been reporting all day. it is... i'm
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so sorry, i've got the front page. 11 people being shot dead at the country of life synagogue in pittsburgh. —— the country of life synagogue. we have had a call of unity the president tram. he is also saying why did they have more guns and security at the synagogue and, you know, you just throw up your arms and say, was on earth does he expect america to look like in the future? bristling guns everywhere. guns at schools because that is where we have had the shootings, guns at synagogues, guns and mosques, who knows. we come at it as a very different perspective because we don't have gun ownership like they do in the us. the laws and rolls about it so different. different cultural hinterland about it. synagogues in this country have two entries security because of an
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increase in anti—semitic attacks. he is saying it is a good thing. i wonder what he would say. it would be fine to have an armed guard in a synagogue. i wonder what he would say of those amount guard stood outside a mosque. i think he would have up problem with that. there's another mail on sunday. an exclusive interview with philip green. he was accused of allegations of racism, sexual harassment, when lord hain used parliamentary privilege earlier in the week to name him because there was a temporary injunction stopping that. it was only banter, he says. the mail seems to have taken a view on this because it says he brazenly dismisses claims and says his own life is a high—risk borrowers. i don't think anyone will feel to synthetic towards philip green. —— sympathetic. i
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feel to synthetic towards philip green. —— sympathetic. lam going feel to synthetic towards philip green. —— sympathetic. i am going to be sympathetic right now. i think he is not a racist, i think he is not a misogynist, i think he is an aggressive early and he is a referee --. whatever the sessions are against him, it is a court determined how it comes out. the whole point is these nondisclosure agreements. that is the main thing. this would have been, these headlines would have been, we would have been seeing these beforehand without the nondisclosure agreement which they say they are going to have a look at and it says on the other paper, i think the sunday telegraph, they are saying that the ministers are looking at actually changing the way it happens. ministers are looking at actually changing the way it happensm ministers are looking at actually changing the way it happens. if any organisation was paying out more than £1 million in silencing people who had made complaints, whether they were well founded or not, and
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getting people to sign nondisclosure agreements about one man, do you think there would be a point where someone would say, it is 300,000, can you stop what you are doing. also, he says it is only banter, but it is not about him, really, it is who is on the receiving end. he says there has been some banter but as farasi there has been some banter but as faras i am there has been some banter but as far as i am concerned, it has never been offensive. it is not what he thinks is offensive is the issue. been offensive. it is not what he thinks is offensive is the issuem is how it was received. let's go back to the telegraph. fake video technology even uk funds. this is a peculiar story. this is about a company, british company, pioneer of this particular technology, artificial intelligence which makes
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it really, the dynamics of a mouth, the way it is described it is the football model of the faith that focuses on the dynamics of the mouth in speech to achieve unprecedented levels of realism. it makes it look really, really natural. so fake news could be seriously difficult to unpick. it takes video and makes it look like you are saying something. like those movies of talking dogs. honest human face. two of their examples here, about the kind of fa ke examples here, about the kind of fake news they could be used to propagate. vladimir putin declaring war on propagate. vladimir putin declaring waron britain, propagate. vladimir putin declaring war on britain, which of course hasn't happened, or footage of donald trump making offensive
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remarks about muslims. he would say the ban was about security, not about islam. susie, let me have the last word, just once in awhile. that's it for the papers. susie boniface from the daily mirror and the broadcaster penny smith will be back at 11.30pm for another look at the papers. next on bbc news, it's time for the film review. this is a self balancing robot. one day, this robot may be taught to work autonomously. poyet is looking at ways to train machines using human operators whose movements are synchronised to this. the operator also wears a virtual reality headset to show them the robot's perspective. it is really strange because i know there is someone on the other side of these eyes. it
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feels like this robot is looking at me. one of the most impressive things about th three is its dexterity and the control it gives its operator when touching and interacting with objects. what is really interesting is not only can the operator control the robot's arms, hands and fingers through the data gloves, but he can actually feel what the robot feels so as the robot cross the object, he can feel the resistance of that object in his fingers and actually, the entire robot mirrors anything that its senses back to the operator so... it can feel the fact that it is being pushed. that means that the operator can sense what is happening to the robot, even in advance into something they can't see, they still know it is there. these technologies could be made to work in many
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industries. would want to develop the robots to assist with household chores and in the future for telly working, to remotely support work which is more physically demanding. toyota is suggesting all robots will be human in the future. but how about a robot that and show a human will to do? —— assuming what to do. this is fusion, my new robot accpac. i now have four arms, two of which are controlled by someone else who is wearing a virtual reality had side. this surrogates can be mounted on your body and assess and guide your motion so it is kind of like
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skills transfer. the operator of the robotic arms who could be on the other side of the world really can teach you things. they can pick things up and they can even grab my arms and move them around. we wanted to create it collaboration between two people that they are sharing the same body. if we share the same body, we share the same point of view, then this will bubbly enhance the quality of excommunication. -- this will probably enhance the quality of communication. can you scratch mine is for me? as strange as an experience to have someone else's movements on my back, i am betting it'll be from the other side. so as i move my head around, sensors track that motion and the robot head moves in response.
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different buttons enable different finger of functions so i can move each finger individually or i can move them all simultaneously with the single button which a mouth —— allows me to move a single object. red dead redemption to allows players to experience the old west. robbing trains, riding horses and playing poker. i'm waiting for someone interesting to turn up. these are the development studio behind this and even if you have never played a touch to control, you know what grand theft auto is, you know what grand theft auto is, you know this is the biggest entertainment product notjust in games but grand theft auto made $6
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billion, that leaves films, television, everything else in the dust. the game is so big it has had to be created using nine different studious and four different countries. the company and editor —— edinburgh is the largest working on the game. not that many people get glimpses that this building. security and secrecy is tight. well, and this rhetoric. located in the former home of the scotsman. rock star is famous for creating games with open world. what is new in this open world? for us, the biggest game we have ever made, not just the biggest game we have ever made, notjust bigger and the biggest game we have ever made, not just bigger and border the biggest game we have ever made, notjust bigger and border but striving for a depth, being able to go into more environments, for people to be able to pick up and
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interact with people and animals and with the world in a way that we haven't been able to do before. if we we re haven't been able to do before. if we were trying to create a world that people believe in, a character that people believe in, a character that you believe in, you have to have that connection, and so we are a lwa ys have that connection, and so we are always trying to push, i think, with every game, to go deeper with that sort of idea. for things to mean something, they need to cost something. so in the last game if you —— if you're also died, you would whistle for it and a new clause would appear. very convenient for a player. they are not like reality. but it meant the horses we re reality. but it meant the horses were somewhat disposable. so we decided the horses aren't going to be disposable. if you go too far from your horse, it won't come back. but if you spend more time with his horse, you will bond with it, and it will come to you from a greater distance, or it will stay with you under duress, in my be less afraid
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to go into the swamp where there are alligators. are you pushing the boundaries of what is capable with interactive and attainment at the moment? i think that everything we have done is to serve that goal and to try and blur the lines between on mission and off mission and what is narrative and what is ambient open world experience and finding that balance between realism and fun. you hope that you have headed as well as you can but you don't know until people played. —— you hope you have hit it. this is someone who can walk when they came in and now they are walking. this woman suffered from polio when she was in a child which left her in a wheelchair, until now. today, she is wearing a hybrid assistive limb suit. when you want
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to move your arms or your legs, your rain sends electrical signals to your muscles. this detects those signals and that is what makes it move. so, if you can't move your arms or legs, the suit still detects the signals and so it can walk for you. if i flex muscles, it still detects the will to move the legs. lower limb disabilities are often caused by a damaged and disconnected nervous system, between what the brain wants to do and resulting muscle movements. but even in severe cases, there are still weak electrical signals that do make it through. and just to prove that it is detecting intention rather than copying any detected movement,
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edited not migraine making my limbs move, the suit doesn't replicate. hal is being used for rehabilitation in serious injuries and muscular diseases where previously patients had no prospects of weatherup —— of being able to move their patient —— their legs again. even for very the late's purpose is not to strengthen muscles but to rebuild renewable loop twin brain and legs. the purpose of this device is to facilitate the synaptic connections... but i'm afraid that is for now from
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japan. this is the short version of the programme, the full—length version of the programme is waiting for you on i play. and you can get more on twitter and facebook. hanky for watching. —— thank you for watching. good evening. it really has been a day is mixed fortunes today. sunny spells and scattered showers across the country. showers down through yorkshire and the midlands and the south—west of england. those will
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just that across the south—east corner overnight tonight and we will have showers running in off the north sea coast as well. further west, clearer skies, that is where the lower values are likely to be. in rule scotland, a touch of light frost was top the best of the sunshine at west on sunday. hopefully using as we go through the day. in the sunshine, temperatures are likely to peak at nine to ii degrees and if you dodge the showers, it might feel a little warmer. as we move into the early pa rt warmer. as we move into the early part of next week, it looks likely to turn increasingly milder but u nfortu nately little wetter, to turn increasingly milder but unfortunately little wetter, too. this is bbc news. i'm reged ahmad. our top stories: and helicopter belonging to the leicester city owner crashes. it is
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not known if he was on board at the time. 11 people have been killed and six injured at a shooting in pittsburgh. a suspect who is in custody has been named as robert bowers who is 46. our minds cannot comprehend the cruel hate and the twisted malice that could cause a person to unleash such terrible violence during a baby naming ceremony. glenn hoddle is taken to hospital after falling ill. ceremony. glenn hoddle is taken to hospital afterfalling ill. at ceremony. glenn hoddle is taken to hospital after falling ill. at 1130, we will take a look at the papers.
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