tv Pep Guardiola BBC News October 27, 2018 11:40pm-12:01am BST
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—— i might even pay tax. goodness. -- i might even pay tax. all the tax will be collected and go to all the places it should go too. very quickly, the observer revealed how universal credit is fuelling the uk's hopeless crisis. they said it anyway, they have been saying this for many years and saying it now, and some mps say we should hold universal reddit and i think indirectly we know there are more rough sleepers. go to any city, any town, even villagers and there will be rough sleepers and a lot of it is put at the door of the universal credit being introduced. they say they are investing £i.2 credit being introduced. they say they are investing £1.2 billion to four all forms of homelessness to ensure more people are held sooner. the act requires council to in the mean sooner where the act requires council to in the mean sooner where people are at risk of having nowhere to go. through universal credit, you want to see people getting the support they are entitled to, supporting themselves,
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easy to get a job when you have a roof over your head. universal credit has cost billions. it has beena credit has cost billions. it has been a demonstrable failure and has been a demonstrable failure and has been the year. a lot of mps have different parties think it is a good idea because it rewards work. poorly executed. and also not founded. badly funded. the issue is we have spent so many billions on this terrible system that doesn't work rockley, there is now an idea that because we have ploughed this much m, because we have ploughed this much in, we had to continue and that is how gamblers act at the roulette wheel. making work pay is supported bya wheel. making work pay is supported by a great number of parties. and also the way that people got money a nyway also the way that people got money anyway was so incredibly difficult, too many things. i think i have finished speaking. she got the last word. can i have the talking stick
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back? you can go now. i will carry on talking. that is it for the papers denied. —— tonight. don't forget, you can see the front pages of the papers online on the bbc news website. it's all there for you, seven days a week at bbc.co.uk/papers, and if you miss the programme any evening, you can watch it later on bbc iplayer. a big thank you to my guests this evening, susie boniface and penny smith. and don't forget that the clocks go back tonight, and goodbye. isn't that good of us to tell you that? i am delighted. an extra hour in bed. good night. music. pep guardiola. hola, hello. thank you everyone forjoining us. this is going to be a little bit different. i ask you for some songs, and we are going to hear the songs and we're going to chat. nothing too revolutionary, but a little bit different, trying to get to understand
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you a little better. so there something magical about music, isn't it? in three minutes, four minutes, itjust takes you to a completely different planet. you enjoy what music does to you. yes. of course. some music, you know, just for the ladies. sometimes for the music. sometimes for you remember an amazing part of your life, a period of your life. yeah, music is part of the culture, you know? how many things change in the world through music? let's start, and let's begin with this. singing in spanish. it is the song that tells the story of a street village party. one of those that happens around san juan night, which is like guy fawkes night here. does this song take you back home a bit? yeah, a little bit. he is one of the best singers in catalonia, spain. he is one of my idols. he sang in spanish and in catalan. it always brings me happiness, this kind of song. i can listen once and once and once again. before the game i have energy.
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i love this song. i was not, you know, a guy like making a lot of parties. at 13 years old i went from academy to barcelona, and i always try to be focused. but in summertime, of course, i'd never been to many discotheques or go to the pubs, drink, never did it. but in that period, i always remember in the summertime, enjoying the summertime, we finished school and everybody goes there. i remember a lot, my little town when i was young. and always i have memories of that song. i heard you say that sometimes you are on the touch line and things are going not well. and you think — how can we do this completely different? well, the managers would take a lot of decisions for feelings. so we have a lot of information. we have to take a lot of information. but the whole point is you are made
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to imprint in your brain, that is the first part. at the second one, one is really persist, you know? it is already in your brain. you have to leave your feelings. and sometimes the media or even your mates or your staff or the players understand that, yeah. we try to understand from this site, but all those things... we have got no chance, have we, of knowing exactly why decisions are being taken? yeah. so i imagine, from your side, when you look at some of the analysis of the work that you do, it must drive you crazy. yeah, but you know what happened? i understand. i'm no one to judge the opinion for the journalist, because it is so important for our business. it is so important. it is tojudge one game, the media should know what is the intentions to play that game. yes. then maybe it is impossible because they have to tell you before the game, ok, guys, i'm going to this this this this... after the opener we will know what we're going to do that. and there are secrets and these kind of situations. let's hear another song.
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which i think we have all heard at least once. # if i was a sculptor. # but then again, no. i was living close to the manchester arena and i saw a few months ago james taylor. i saw paul simon. at his tour. i listened to him with his band. many, many concerts. one of my dreams before i leave from this country, having a concept for eltonjohn. especially of this song, i was listening to the song when i was 18, 19 years old and started to play in barcelona. and i remember the song in that period sounds a lot in my life. i don't know the reason why. i've never been in his... would be in one of my dreams. i've met him one we were playing watford last season, the last game and it was a huge pleasure. hopefully he will organise a concert, please, i will be there. "my gift is my song and this one is for you." do we all have a gift to give? a talent, a special talent, something that we are very good at? well i think
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professionally, i think... which bit? the living, the playing, the understanding it, the dissecting it? i think i'm good because of my passion. so i love... when you say i love this game. you know, i love, i love that. and when you put something through you, when your passion is in front of you, always it works. is there a second thing that you like the most? if football had he been a part of your life or something have happened? when i try to relax the most is when i am playing golf. i think it is the only place when i am — people don't look at me, you know. i can walk. people in front 150 yards and behind you 150 yards. and we can go or you can play with your father or your son. you can play with your father, your friends, your wife. either you can play with someone... so that is why it is the only way i can do little but break...
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somebody with a gift, a huge gift, wasjohan cruyff. he helped me to love this game, to love football. and to love it, you have to understand it. he gave us their secrets about the way he sees football, and they made me this passionate, put it in my blood. even to now. he was like a spiritual father, like their father in a sport way. like it was so rough, so tough, you cannot imagine. and it was a time so i cannot stay any more with him. i remember when we went to barcelona, i said "i am going because i cannot stay any more with him, forget about it." so it was so rough. do you still talk to him? with who? withjohan. well, i am not so religion guy. i grew up like going to the church, you know? but i don't believe too much, maybe one of the lovely persons i ever met in my life, like every weekend go to the church and maybe he will be good friends with me. but he is always present.
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so i don't talk to him, but always he is a part, always i remember, and especially in this period in england i would have loved if we would have been able to watch us, you know? # start spreading the news. # i'm leaving today. what can you say that frank sinatra can explain better than anyone else? what is new york. you needed to go away. yep. you needed to go away. and that is the perfect city for it because you can hide, you can be very visible and hide it the same time. no, i want to stay in barcelona, i have to move on, and not even europe because that is still involved there. in the states i thought is a nice city to spend one year and it will be far away from football. and there you learned german? i arrived there and stayed the first month there and immediately i signed a contract to go to bayern munich and started to study german. in new york. in the morning it was three or four hours a day. studying a little bit of grammatic, and after two or three months i remember i wanted to call
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and break the contract because it would not be possible to learn! it was so complicated. but i was... iam... stubborn? stubborn. say if this story is true. you were going to meet around december or something. yeah. and only met by accident sir alex ferguson. yeah. who was your neighbour at the time. and ferguson said, "what are you doing here?" and he went, "well, you know i've got sausages and i've got a company that sells sausages and i've got a meeting about sausages." laughter. that's true! is it true? yeah, he has a big, big company in sausages. really good. they are really good. but, yeah. that happened, that happened. that must‘ve been amazing as well, do you know, with sir alex. yeah. because, for what i know of you, you love the legendary part of football as well as, you know... working with kids. yeah. everything has to do
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with football, but sitting down with sir alex ferguson... i met him more, you know, as a person. and it is fantastic. so that is a joy to be a manager of football, to meet extraordinary people. and when i saw him in old trafford again with all the people, the crowd, and you know clapping and he deserved it. all our respect. and i am so glad he's coming back and going well. for the biography i wrote of you, i asked him to write a forward, he didn't think about it long. he actually said, "why we've barcelona?" the way he in england is football, you can state he is here may be in one place. truly true. here during the week, i do see the journalling is and what happened for example, we had many, many problems maybe in the club and in the locker room. sometimes we have to be tough with the players. nothing goes out. you know? it is a few times. in barcelona or in bayern munich, everything would happen. in one place or another, or in the media. that is why here you
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are more comfortable. now let's go back from the states, let's jump the atlantic ocean for this next song. # so sally can wait. # she knows it is too late. this is par. it's incredible, this song. prove to me the best of myself when i listen to this song. it's a masterpiece. we sang with the staff every time we go out, and always we sing this song all together. we love it. and after it was known to me so well i like it, i like this song. i like what happened after the manchester arena. now it is a song for the people. that moment when you're in youtube, you know, everybody is silence and one woman starts to sing the song and everybody sings. that is a moment. a moment that will be so, so touchable for my family and for myself. when did you hear about it first?
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what happened at the arena? i was at home. i was at home and my son and my wife and daughter were there. and... at the end we were lucky, unfortunately for the people who suffered. and we were lucky. and after we went down with my son. did somebody call you? she called me. but the line broke. we tried to call her again and it doesn't work. and after, we went to the arena, and afterfive minutes, six minutes, she called me again, "we are out, we are out, coming back home". why not a big house outside manchester, and instead you live in the city centre? always when i went to roma, and
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borussia and new york, it is easier. i always have to live in the city. because i don't live alone — i live with my wife and kids, kids and the school and i go working, and my wife is away. you know, with that house alone there. being in the city, you can go to the cinema, you can go to the restaurants, clothes, we can go walking, we don't need the car. it is much more comfortable. we like to live, you know, in the city. in the middle. i like it. so i am sorry, i will be a mancunian for the rest of my life, so i will be a manchester city fan. it will not be possible to train at a team in england like manchester city. because i feel beloved from the people here. # it'll be ok. # on the healing day. so simple. and so beautiful. yes. why this song?
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it is a perfect song to, you know, to stay at home when you read a book or being even with the kids and listening and listening. there are songs, you know, the music is like this, sometimes it is the lyrics, sometimes it is the tone, sometimes... i don't know. but this song will be remembered at the period of my life here in manchester. i listened a lot, this song. is your wife the anchor, the reference, the energy provider? what does she do when you come home? she is there, so it is... for her sometimes it was easy, sometimes not. but the lovely kids we have is because she was there. so if we decide to move to new york or decide to move to munich and now here — if she doesn't decide to come, i don't come. i will not be here. so i cannot be alone in this kind of job without the family. david will be eternally grateful for what has happened in the last 12 months or so, because sometimes there are things that are bigger than football. i understand that the first thing that you said to him was what you need, and that
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if you want to go back home, just go back home. is that how it went? of course. what should... i do differently, what happened... you know, the premature? premature, yeah. premature child. so the real, real, premature. he fought, little matteo fought for his life. a lot, many months. and david said, "you've got to stay three months there, "stay three months there and anyone to come back, come back. "decide yourself. "so we are there, everything you need. "and i think matteo will be strong. "he survived or he fought for his life. "anything can happen in his life. "he can handle it." the last song we are going to hear is this very famous one. # welcome to the hotel california. what do you love about this song?
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someone doesn't love this song? laughter. yeah, i guess, i guess... no way! no, no, no. always remember when i was young, this song. when i lived with flatmates in barcelona. a musician's legacy is in the song. what would you like your legacy to be as a football coach? but also in life? believe me, always i try to, you know... to the people i'm working with, be comfortable with me. or i try to be comfortable with them. so not statistics and numbers is nice, but are you happy to be there in perspective of all we have done like this. that is numbers, you know. numbers are not passion, it does not give you something. it is better when it is a love — still after ten years or 12 years i remember this final and how good they played. you know, i think all the managers, we are happy with how we were all players or players when we see each other again, we can laugh, we can hug, we can talk. we have a good relationship.
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so everyone wants to be loved. we've reached the end of the road with this. i really enjoyed this and i wanted to thank you for your time here. thank you very much. it was a pleasure. it was the first time i him in the bbc. —— i am in. oh, yes. it was the first time. one friend of mine, one friend of mine tells me that spain needs a bbc. one bbc. the moment spain has one bbc, spain will be different. yeah, you have to change spain perhaps. laughter. to be able to have a one bbc. but i know what you're saying. laughter. i'm saying. thank you. good morning. another cold day for many, but an east—west divide with the weather. today, the best of the sunshine the further west you are, and that is because of the wind direction. more of a north—easterly
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driving cloud off that north sea, sir eastern areas always at the risk ofa sir eastern areas always at the risk of a future showers. top temperatures struggling again, 8— ii degrees. a cold feeling by day, but by night the winds will fall and it gets colder still. some showers along the east coast but they will start to ease away. with lighter winds and clear skies those temperatures are going to fall away really quite sharply. a widespread frost first thing on monday morning, actually start but a sparkling one, with sunshine to look out for and light winds and fewer showers. not a bad day in prospect. clouding over from the west with the risk of isolated showers into the western isles as well. highest values of 7— ten. take care. this is bbc news.
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i'm reged ahmad. our top stories: at least 11 people are shot dead after a gunman opens fire in a synagogue in the us city of pittsburgh. the gunman, who's been named as robert bowers, surrendered to police after a shoot—out at the scene. this evil anti—semitic attack is an assault on all of us. it is an assault on all of us. it is an assault on all of us. it is an assault on humanity. in other news, a helicopter belonging to leicester city's thai owner has crashed after taking off from the football team's stadium. hello and welcome to bbc news. at least 11 people have been killed in pittsburgh
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