tv Breakfast BBC News May 17, 2019 6:00am-8:31am BST
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eurovision — the fans are here... ..the rehearsals are underway... ..and representing the uk is michael rice... it's lovely to meet you. nice to meet you. lovely to meet you. good morning. welcome to breakfast, ..who wasn't even born withjon kay and mega munchetty. our headlines today: the last time the uk won, an end to brexit talks but having spent the last few months between the government on a tour of europe, and the labour party, after six weeks of trying he's already got a taste to agree a deal. of eurovision fame. i never in a million years the hunt is on for a new thought i'd have fans, so to go to these countries and see conservative leader as theresa may promises to step down this summer. everyone there waiting outside hotels for days just to get a photo of me, it's crazy. eurovision very much prides itself on being a celebration of inclusiveness, but the question this year will be very much a first for uk medicine. how baby jaxson was treated about exactly who is going to be for spina bifida in the womb by doctors using keyhole surgery. coming to the party. this is iceland's hatari, who are... award—winning anticapitalist thank you forjoining in our conversation about menopause this week. today we are talking about how doomsday techno.
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to be happier, healthier, and how to help your home life. also, you need and they had doubts about playing in israel given the political to tell your children about it, situation, but felt they could make because if you don't know about the more of a statement by coming. however... menopause, you willjust think they you've been told no are having a mental breakdown. but politics on stage? when i found out that it was yes. medical, i wasn't that concerned. which is impossible, and a paradox. when you want to get something have you been told to stop talking done, ask the expert. about politics offstage? the boss of timpson yes, but the line is blurry. is used to fixing things. we find out how he is getting we've been warned. on with his plan to mend the high street. they wanted to check that i wasn't crazy. the words of england defender danny rose as he reveals that a potential new club questioned his mental health. and after a week of sunshine, a bit more cloud around today and even one but, while there has been talk oi’ more cloud around today and even one or two showers. in sunnier moments it will still feel pleasantly warm. of boycotts and protests, that will be the case this weekend. so far it has actually been pretty much business as usual i will have all the details here on for israel's eurovision party. david sillito, bbc news, tel aviv. brea kfast. it is friday 17 may. our top story: talks to try to come tomorrow nights, eurovision. i think up with a brexit deal have failed. it is on for about 17 hours. the government and labour party are expected to pull out next week will mark two years without reaching an agreement, since the bomb at manchester arena the bbc has learned. now, theresa may has promised to set which killed 22 people. a timetable to leave downing street the youngest victim
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following the next brexit vote, expected next month. our political correspondent joins us now. chris, what more do we know was eight—year—old saffie roussos, about these cross—party talks? who was at the concert with her mum, lisa. she was badly injured in the attack, but after extensive surgery is that it, over, done? yes, ithink and rehabilitation, she is preparing to walk the route of the great manchester run this weekend. alongside her husband, andrew, she has given her first broadcast interview to our north of england correspondentjudith moritz. i don't really remember a lot. i so, ithink is that it, over, done? yes, ithink so, i think that is going to be pretty much it. we will hear from jeremy corbyn banging the final nail into the coffin of these talks. they have been doodling on for a0 days by remember leaving, and saffie had got my hand, this hand, and she was oui’ have been doodling on for a0 days by our calculation, just over six pulling, jumping about. my arm was weeks, and yes, they have been outstretched, holding her hand as she was pulling me, and the next serious, and yes, they have been minute ijust hit the detailed. but ultimately, the gulf she was pulling me, and the next minute i just hit the floor with a between the sides, especially the thud. ijust tribes between those around the minute i just hit the floor with a thud. i just remember lying minute i just hit the floor with a thud. ijust remember lying there and trying to move. i was just table. lots of labour supporters physically... i wasjust and trying to move. i was just physically... i was just paralysed, i couldn't really think, i couldn't desperate for a referendum, many move at all. i could blink, ijust
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conservatives keen to leave the kept thinking to myself, just keep your eyes open. and when somebody customs union, so it looks like they finally spoke to me and started will end. and then what, as far as who has our prime minister going to moving me, they asked me my name, be —— who is our prime minister andi moving me, they asked me my name, and ijust moving me, they asked me my name, going to be? it looks like the and i just said moving me, they asked me my name, and ijust said saffie. that's all i starting pistol has now been fired. could get out. i wanted to say will you just go and find saffie? then i must have gone again, because the next time i remember them cutting my yes, it has. to an extent, the jeans off, and that was the last conversation has been going on here thing i remembered until i woke up. at westminster for a good few weeks. how many weeks later? six weeks. six but the corridors are alive now to the sound of speculation about who weeks later. what happened at that point? andrew was with you. andrew might be in the mix. let's bring you was with me, and i can remember first of all those we know are certainly saying they would thinking, well, why has he not definitely want the job, they are mentioned saffie? and i knew, ijust answering the question definitively. we have boris johnson, answering the question definitively. we have borisjohnson, who yesterday ina we have borisjohnson, who yesterday in a conference in manchester busted knew. i thought, the worst kept secret that mentioned saffie? and i knew, ijust knew. ithought, if mentioned saffie? and i knew, ijust knew. i thought, if i am this badly hurt, and she was a tiny westminster has ever had, and that is saying something, saying that he eight—year—old, then what chance would she have? like an intuition? will be in the mix. the former foreign secretary. esther mcveigh has also said that she is keen, yes. did you ask the question? i former cabinet minister, and rory
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said she is gone, isn't she? it is a stewart, newly elevated in the last couple of weeks, so they are three that are saying they are definitely in the race. they are the kind of painful moment. i can't talk about exceptions at the moment, willing to offer a i—word answer to a direct it. because it is so raw, and it is question. when we look at those who two years on. it makes no difference we expect will be in the mix, the entire pack of cards comes into at all, does it? no, it doesn't. play. here is just entire pack of cards comes into play. here isjust a handful of them still like yesterday. i feel like we who could be amongst the runners and riders, jeremy hunt, the foreign are stuck in 2017. yes, you do. it secretary, liz truss, the chief is amazing how these two years have secretary, there is a huge amount of gone by, but when sometimes we talk speculation, but also mps accepting amongst each other, you are stuck in invites to all sorts of gatherings 2017. and for you, over the last two they might not otherwise go to in order to set out their case and make their argument that they could be yea rs, 2017. and for you, over the last two years, balancing your bereavement, your loss, with your recovery, how their argument that they could be the replacement for theresa may —— liz truss. house of cards indeed, have those two things been possible? thank you very much indeed. for the first time, doctors i felt like i needed in the uk have successfully used have those two things been possible? ifelt like i needed to be strong, keyhole surgery to treat a baby boy andi ifelt like i needed to be strong, and i needed to be the best i could with spina bifida inside the womb. be before i could deal with the loss the team from king's college hospital in london say the procedure isn't a cure, but improves
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the baby's future chances of walking of saffie. i had to learn to walk and is saferfor the mother again. the first few steps around than invasive surgery. here is our health and science the ward, i felt like again. the first few steps around the ward, ifelt like i had run a marathon, didn't i? i was out of breath, sweating. it was only about correspondent james gallagher. five steps. they hand, i think the baby jaxson ba by jaxson is just a baby jaxson is just a few weeks old, progress is a lot slower with my but more than two months ago he had hand. that's been reconstructed? pioneering surgery on his spine. it's been reconstructed, yes. doctors operated onjaxson while he there's still a lot of numbness in was still inside his mother's worm, it, and nerve damage. taking part in his mum said it was a shock to find the great manchester run has given you a has it? yes, it's let me look out he had spina bifida. it was a very high risk pregnancy from the further into the future than i start, anyway. from being told i normally do, and it's the start of the charity, the launch of the charity, so it's all good and couldn't have babies, and everything, so any decision we have positive. she needs to be there to had to make, i have made it purely for the fact that he is meant to be help victims —— the charity needs to here. you know, it's — he'sjust be there to help victims of terrorism, there is no help. do you fought every day. it was these feel let down? by the government, pregnancy scans that showed jaxson's definitely. it was offered, £5,500 spine and spinal cord were not each for the death of saffie. developing properly. spina bifida
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can lead to paralysis and affects through the compensation scheme? bladder and bowel control, but through the compensation scheme? surgery bladder and bowel control, but surgery in the womb can reduce the through the compensation scheme, thatis through the compensation scheme, that is the maximum. it is a risk of complications later in life. com plete that is the maximum. it is a complete insult. taking part in the we are operating on very delicate run in manchester, how will that structures, defeatist nerves, they feel, do you think, being back here? are exposed, the foetus itself is i know it's going to be emotional, very small, and we are operating on not just for i know it's going to be emotional, notjust for me, i know it's going to be emotional, not just for me, for all of a foetus inside the womb. so i know it's going to be emotional, notjust for me, for all of us that's walking. but it's a good obviously it is a very delicate thing, and we need — we need it, operation. this is how it works. three small incisions were made in don't we? something good's gotta come out of something so awful, it's sherrie's bump. a thin camera and got to. small surgical tools were inserted into her worm, then surgeons put the talking about remembering her spinal cord back in place and put a patch over the wound. jaxson needed daughter saffie killed in the manchester bombing two years ago to be looked after in neonatal next week. intensive care when he was born. he well, in response, the government has not been cured, but his family says it has worked to ensure victims of terrorism receive "effective hope they have given him the best and comprehensive support" start in life. which includes a 2a hour support line. as we come to the end of our special week dealing with issues around and coverage of the great manchester run will be presented the menopause, one of the world's by gabby logan live on bbc2 leading experts is calling from 12:00pm on sunday, for testosterone replacement therapy with a highlights programme to be made widely available to women who need it. to follow at 5:00pm.
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the treatment isn't currently licensed for doctors to prescribe to menopausal women. here's matt with a look the president of the at this morning's weather. international menopause society, professor susan davis, has been this is how birmingham is looking. speaking to breakfast‘sjohn maguire. great to see the trees and leaves out. looking beautifully green. even sophie was in her early 30s when she ona out. looking beautifully green. even on a cloudy day. that looks stunning. cloud are the theme? started the menopause after a hysterectomy. i just started the menopause after a hysterectomy. ijust felt started the menopause after a hysterectomy. i just felt like started the menopause after a hysterectomy. ijust felt like i'd gone from being a 32—year—old to yes, they certainly. the rain has being 80, like, overnight. is part cleared in birmingham. this was the of the hormone replacement therapy, as along with oestrogen, she was scene just a cleared in birmingham. this was the scenejust a short cleared in birmingham. this was the scene just a short while ago with the sun coming out. a fine saturday given testosterone, most often associated with men, but also a for some of you but we have seen more cloud. there is a cloud here vital female associated with men, but also a vitalfemale hormone. my associated with men, but also a vital female hormone. my libido associated with men, but also a vitalfemale hormone. my libido had com pletely vitalfemale hormone. my libido had completely disappeared after pushing in of the near continent. surgery, completely disappeared after surgery, and that's come back. for me it wasjust kept at bay to the west of ireland. surgery, and that's come back. for me it was just kind surgery, and that's come back. for me it wasjust kind of surgery, and that's come back. for me it was just kind of that lifeline, and with the oestrogen and testosterone, i have gone back to where i am functioning kind of as i it stretches into northern parts of england, southern scotland and was before, slightly a bit more fatigued and forgetful still, but i edging towards the isle of man and kind of feel a lot more like my old through north wales and northern
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self again. however, it is a treatment that many doctors are ireland. it doesn't mean that once relu cta nt to thatis ireland. it doesn't mean that once that is gone, skies will brighten treatment that many doctors are reluctant to prescribe. at the moment, using testosterone to treat across much of northern england and across much of northern england and the symptoms of the menopause is across scotland. through the unlicensed, but a major midlands and south wales, a fairly international conference featuring almost 900 gynaecologists here in cloudy day stop limited amount of berlin once that to change. —— wants sunshine but the cloud thick enough for a few showers. temperatures down on what we have seen so far. further that to change. there are a lot of women being treated with male north, feeling quite warmer. formulations, which are several fold brightening up in northern ireland. too much, and compound therapies such an across scotland this which are sort of ad hoc afternoon. some of the highest of prescriptions. by providing a product for women, we are preventing the temperatures in the west. 19 in women from being mistreated by products that aren't for women. there's not going to be a tsunami of glasgow. england and wales, most women wanting testosterone. what we places in the mid teens. the breeze are going to do is make available a product for women who are already being treated. like all hrt, it is will be strongest tonight in the northern half of the uk. scotland not suitable for every patient, but with the wettest weather. most other places dry. fairly cloudy, stopping many here believe it is a treatment that could make a real difference to so that could make a real difference to so many women's lives. the temperature from dropping too
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we will be carrying on our week—long much. a big picture for the weekend. conversation throughout the morning. louise will be live from birmingham later, talking about the impact of the menopause on relationships, low pressure across parts of the and she will hear about some great mediterranean. not many isobars in lifestyle and fitness tips the charts. not wind on saturday across england and wales. showers which can help women cope. will form and some of those will be heavy and thundery. further north, 100 people have been stabbed more of a breeze. northern ireland to death in the uk so far this year, according to bbc research. figures obtained from police forces more of a breeze. northern ireland more cloud and rain. cooler than it across the country show the largest group of victims are men in their 20s. has done most of the week. 19 in 95 of the 100 cases, someone has been arrested. degrees possible in the london area. the fa cup final, the chance of a few showers but most of the time it three british people and a south african citizen have will be dry. if you are heading to been killed after a small plane crashed in dubai. the crew of the plane had been working for a british—based company northern ireland for the north—west 200. particularly during the first a few miles from dubai international airport when it hit half of your day. for sunday, most the ground yesterday evening. an investigation is underway. places dry. more brightness in northern ireland. a few showers cropping up here and there. the best of the dry weather in the south and
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more than two thirds of lgbt people say they have been sexually harassed the best of the sunshine here with at work, but most don't report it, new research suggests. the report by the tuc is believed highs of 21 celsius. hopefully the to be the first major study into lesbian, gay, bisexual manchester run will have dry and tra nsgender people being sexually harassed at work in great britain. the government says it is starting weather. a consultation on harassment and employers must understand all right for the weekend. their legal responsibilities. a hundred people have been stabbed the world premier of eltonjohn's to death in the uk so far this year. biopic rocketman took place that's according to figures obtained at cannes film festival in france last night. by bbc news from police the film received a five—minute forces across the country. standing ovation, although much the largest group of victims of the applause was directed are men in their 205, towards elton himself, who wore a tuxedo with the words as our home affairs correspondent, to his most famous song stitched in sparkles on the back. tom symonds, reports. 100 crime scenes, 100 lost lives. we the night ended with actor taron egerton, who plays elton, singing rocket man on stage have been tracking murder and manslaughter in britain in 2019 and alongside the man himself. the knife is the most used motor weapon. charlotte hangings became charlie has been talking to him, and the first stabbing victim on new we will run that interview on monday. he has the first sitdown year's day in the south london. 0n interview with him. it is going to average there was a knife murder or
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be great. i hope i am not in that manslaughter nearly every day and a half that followed. each phase film, last september we were filming represents a devastated family and an expensive murder enquiry. nearly an expensive murder enquiry. nearly a third of victims were under 30. longest drive, in golf, and they we re longest drive, in golf, and they were filming on the other side of nearly one fifth were under 20 — and the course. we had to stay out of the shot. we are talking thatis nearly one fifth were under 20 — and that is a huge worry for the police about men's mental health, after and youth workers. in the west quite a shocking admission from midlands, knife crime as reason 96% danny rose, after opening up about since 2013. eight attacks this year. his depression. danny rose says he was embarrased after a club said they wanted to meet him to check he wasn't crazy. along with manchester and london the the tottenham and england defender says it happened when he spoke highest rate in the country. here to an unnamed club about a potential they say it has moved just beyond transfer last summer, after he had opened up, those involved in gangs. it is about his struggles with depression. he was speaking as part of a special bbc one programme across all people now and seeing about men's mental health. what used to be a small act of chelsea midfielder ruben violence, perhaps a slap or a punch, loftus—cheek is out of england's squad for the nations league finals after rupturing his achilles playing in a charity match for chelsea. turn into something far more it is an injury that serious. two promising signs. in 95 could keep him out for a year, so he misses the europa league final of the 100 cases, someone has been against arsenal at the end of the month, too.
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arrested and, in london, the nick kyrgios admitted that emotions metropolitan police released figures got the better of him as he forfeited his second—round suggesting a 10% fall in knife match at the italian 0pen. he rowed with a spectator, crime, resulting in an injury. threw his racket and a chair before walking off court in rome. tom symonds, bbc news. byron highton's brotherjon—jo was just 18 when he was stabbed brooks koepka is the man to catch at the uspga championships to death by a gang in 201a, byron joins us now. in new york. good morning. you find it important the defending champion leads on seven—under at bethspage. tommy fleetwood is the leading brit and is four shots back, in third. to share your story and educate people. can you put into words the more in the papers shortly. it is impact on you and the family, losing your younger brother? the best way getting cloudier. it has been quite to describe it to people as i do in glorious this week. i felt some rain my talks is when you see someone you love killed in such a horrific way, this morning. i didn't, you must have come in earlier than me. maybe especially the way he was killed with injuries, your soul gets ripped it wasn't rain. matt, you can tell out. i know it sounds hard to us. yes, much more cloud around across the country today. if you get explain but that is the closest way the sunshine it will feel pleasantly of describing it and i still have
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warm, especially across parts of western scotland, and there will be not found the part i lost that day. a bit of sunshine this weekend. already a bit of cloud across in hampshire at the moment. it is not that is you and your brother when you were much younger. you must look this cloud on the satellite image we at that and see a brotherly future are looking at, it is this coming out of the east. under that we have seen some deprived. that is the first day i out of the east. under that we have seen some rain out of the east. under that we have seen some rain so out of the east. under that we have seen some rain so far today. here it comes during the last few hours met him. i do not like looking at across parts of eastern england, through the west midlands, it. what was the age difference? i north—west england, some heavy bass as well. that will move through the think six or seven years. what kind isle of man in the west of scotland of conversations did you have with towards northern ireland later. things will brighten up across parts him. he was attacked by six men. of western england. sunshine returns across scotland, but always staying across scotland, but always staying a bit cloudier throughout the day convicted. what kind of situation and southernmost counties of england and southernmost counties of england and wales, and here we will continue was in? he was killed by guilty to see a few spots of rain and showers into the afternoon. by the time we had the afternoon school association. he just was in? he was killed by guilty association. hejust finished was in? he was killed by guilty pick—up, just ahead of the rush association. he just finished work. he saw my mum for the last time. he hour, the journey home for the weekend, they will be a lot of cloud and a bit of an easterly breeze. a gave her the dirty clothing and she day further north, but the sunshine put them in the wash. he want to his returns to northern ireland, north—west england and of scotland. dad ‘s and a car went past him and in the west of scotland we could still hit around 20 or 21 celsius
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because they saw my brother and other people were looking for, they this afternoon. certainly feeling cooler across england and wales, with a lot more cloud and that attacked him instead and u nfortu nately attacked him instead and north—easterly breeze that i unfortunately he got stabbed in the mentioned. we finished the day with neck with a sword. you talk to most places dry, but into tonight, people about carrying a knife, to it will turn wetter across scotland, young people. how do they react? i murky around eastern coast as well. the odd shower further south, it adds up to temperatures not dropping too far during the night into mean, just by association! the bbc tomorrow morning, most places around 8- 11 tomorrow morning, most places around 8— 11 degrees. into the weekend we ones asked a young adult by they go and rather than the high pressure we have had for much of this week, chose to listen to me and stuart and low pressure centred towards the south—east of us. notice not many our team over the authorities... the isobars on the chart, not many lines police... the police. and this young on the charge, so winds will be lighter across england and wales. when you get the strong sunshine, it man said it is because they feel the presence in the room. it is not will feel very pleasant. a few someone presence in the room. it is not someone saying you cannot carry a afternoon showers breaking out, the odd heavy and thundery one. scotland knife. they feel my emotion. we had and northern ireland, much cloudier, two girls praying in manchester. the much cooler, outbreaks of rain coming through the day and the wettest conditions in the morning. you may catch one or two heavy principal said it would be a crime
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showers close to wembley during the day but the emphasis will be on a for you not to travel around the lot of dry weather for those heading country. i pour my heart out to them off to the fa cup final during saturday afternoon. dry weather to and in return i am getting their come during sunday, isolated hardback and i am keeping myron's showers, sunny spells, and name alive. it is amazing what we temperatures into the upper teens and low 20s. a few showers for the do. the reason we talk about this northern half of the uk in todayis particular but overall, scotland and do. the reason we talk about this today is because the bbc has these northern ireland compared with saturday should be a little bit figures that already this year, the brighter and hopefully a little bit middle of may, 100 people have died warmer than it will feel on in fatal stabbings across the saturday. certainly a change from what we have had this week. while country so far this year. it is hard there will be some rain, there will be some sunshine as well. back to to compare with other years and we you both. cannot make conclusions butjust let's take a look at today's papers: that number, 100, after what you have been through. that number, 100, after what you have been throughlj that number, 100, after what you have been through. i said to you they are just they arejust landing! before, even one, let alone with two many of the front pages focus on theresa may's future as party leader. zeros after that. it shocked me. i the daily telegraph pictures the prime minister getting had an interview a few weeks ago and into her car after a meeting, in which she was "tearful" as "men in grey suits" they asked me and i said i would not told her to quit. "boris shows his hand" is wish it on the parents who killed my
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the daily mail's headline. brother. i would not wish them in their present cells how i feel, all probably one of the worst kept secrets at westminster. the paper says the former my soldier of a mum feels. i would foreign secretary has made a "dramatic pitch" for the tory leadership. the daily mirror features not wish it on them. i am so sorry a photo of eve senior, a victim of the manchester bomb attack who is talking about her experience two years on. you are in this pain but i think the work doing is changing lies. we are doing this off our backs. we are a charity run foundation and i think we work so well because we are a tea m we work so well because we are a the express saying theresa may urged team and share the same passion and they literally brought me on and said, go out into the world and tell us drugmakers to make a drug available under the nhs. a mother the world about your brother. thank you so much for doing it with us. with one—year—old daughter who has that could be 100 families watching this morning appreciating it.“ cystic fibrosis is pictures there. anyone needs our help or needs us to what is in the business pages? end go into the school or by our
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of the financial times we talked merchandise, go to our webpage and i about the bam for vegetarianism and will be that at any school, any vegan. we have heard in february time. well done. we've had an incredible that they were going into the market to be sold. they open one vegetarian reaction to our conversation about the menopause and louise store in london and they expected to is live at the birmingham botanical gardens for us this morning. you said you have never known work a lot but it's sold out in three hours. why does it have to be anything quite like it. it has been amazing and thank you for being a vegetarian store? i suppose if you involved and i am pleased the conversation is out there. we thought we would wrap it up this are vegetarian or vegan you want to week by answering some of your questions and celebrating some of walk in and not have to read the the things we have found out. louise label. glimpses have also started is at the birmingham botanical serving of vegan food. a chocolate gardens. a very good morning. it is absolutely gardens. a very good morning. it is a bsolutely lovely to gardens. a very good morning. it is absolutely lovely to be out this morning and we are talking a lot about impact on families and so many of you getting in touch with a thatis lovely messages. 0ne mother said her serving of vegan food. a chocolate that is saved on a certain train
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journey... i know the one you mean. daughter came back with a fan for her because she realised what her flashes were like. and a a husband it falls apart when you dunk it. her bag is surrounded by crumbs. the usa saying he was able to talk to his have unearthed a new giant of wife for the first time about it. i basketball. seven foot six stop even know exercise has been a good exercise with the blue tits. when taller than us. the reporter is five your mum was feeling menopausal, how did it feel? she was getting really, incredible. he is only 23. is he really stressed and made us stress she's not the type of person that good at basketball? yes, he plays in gets stressed. everything was intense in the house and you had to florida. an so andy picks up his be kind of careful. you are saying that very well indeed. and not gong. he was awarded it two years ago. because of his medical feeling like themselves is one of the things. it felt like i lost procedures, he has never been able to go to the place and pick up his myself. i had been a relatively in control person, possibly not, but i knighthood. and, yes, his mother thought i was and suddenly i could
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not leave the house without falling tweeted there's a picture. this is apart. heart racing, feeling from an artwork done a couple of completely unable to be me. you are years ago by an edinburgh artist. it not alone in that. you went to open pictures sir andy as king arthur. water swimming. so many of you will remember annabel and her family from years ago by an edinburgh artist. it pictures sir andy as king arthurlj yesterday. you are menopausal at 15. love going out to dinner. you know that. and i enjoy a glass of wine. i was struck by the sense of loss per year. how has school been? it in manchester... not just that. and i enjoy a glass of wine. in manchester... notjust one was hard at first. nobody knew what glass... in manchester there is a restau ra nt glass... in manchester there is a restaurant and a group of diners went out and ordered £260 bottle of was hard at first. nobody knew what was going on. you could take a joke. wine got £a500 bottle of glass by but now it has settled down and a lot of people are there for me and mistake. i so wish i was in that. supportive. so clear your mum and dad are also. it is notjust people how cana my age but lots of people going mistake. i so wish i was in that. how can a bottle of wine be worth that much! £2 60 is my budget. the through this at a much younger age
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as well. a little bit later we're talking about families and the impact on teenagers and mums and, bottles you would have thought were also, the men in all of this are really important. we have a similar but they are not. they look wonderfulfilm really important. we have a wonderful film with husband saying very different. and the waitress did how they managed to help their wives getting through what is just a not lose herjob period of change. now for the news very different. and the waitress did not lose her job because very different. and the waitress did not lose herjob because thejobs said they did not mind and they got and travel where you. lots of publicity. shall we get a good morning from bbc london news, couple of glasses, to deliver. i'm tarah welsh. tests for co nta m i na nts all week on breakfast, from the grenfell tower fire we've been having a converstion about the menopause, are underway at one of hammersmith and fulham council's largest and we want to say a big thank housing estates. you to all of you who have contacted us. experts are getting ready to take soil samples we've had an incredible response. at the edward woods estate, which is just over half a mile away from the tower. they'll be testing for substances today we're looking at lifestyle that could potentially cause asthma tips for coping, and how and cancerthe councils says it plans relationships are affected. to discuss the findings with residents in june. a thanksgiving service is being held at westminster abbey
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to celebrate one hundred years particularly when the symptoms are of women in the met police. not so clear. on this day in 1919, louise is at the birmingham members of the newly—formed female police appeared in their uniform botanical gardens for us. for the first time. a good morning to you. i have to met women dressed in the orginal uniform will be recreating this photo on the steps echo what you have been saying, thank you, thank you for so many of of the home office. your messages. we've had a huge reaction to the series. i was apprehensive about telling my it has been the workhorse of the great western railway, story, but the response has shown but tomorrow, the the high that none of us are alone. speed train's services through the thames valley come to an end. introduced in 1976, the iconic design has been a symbol of britain's railways for more than forty years. today we are talking about how to be but its time carrying commuters to london paddington is now over, healthier and happier and as the old diesels are replaced specifically about exercise because you probably would have guessed i do by electric services. a lot of exercise and every single swim, bike and run this year has made me feeljust these old trains, very simple, swim, bike and run this year has made me feel just that little swim, bike and run this year has few distractions, made me feeljust that little bit really quite reliable, better. we have been out to speak to despite what one may have heard, they've done a really good job, blue tits the. we swim all year yeah, everyone loves them. round in swimsuits. a lot of us are
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let's take a look at the travel situation now... ofa there are minor delays round in swimsuits. a lot of us are of a certain age and are going through the menopause and coming on the dlr between bank and lewisham together every single day and and woolwich arsenal due to a signal failure. letting go of our inhibitions just 0nto the roads, the north make us feel that little bit better. circular remains closed in both directions between the charlie browns roundabout and the redbridge roundabout. hopefully i am coming towards the and in clapham: the a3 end of the menopause and fermi is closed northbound exercise takes the edge off it. it from a2a clapham common south side to clapham common tube station due to a crash. gives me a reason to get out of the house. meet lots of new people. time for the weather with elizabeth rizzini. keeps me calm. swimming in hello. good morning. particular has helped with the hot it might be in the middle of may flushes. they kind of went away more but it certainly not going to feel very much like it today. or less after i started. you can there will be very little in the way of brightness and sunshine. an awful lot of grey cloud around. some outbreaks of patchy rain feel really out of sorts and in a and drizzle at times and temperatures will be below foul mood and you get in the water the average for this time of year and use swim and itjust seems to but it is a fairly mild start to the morning. it's quite grey and dull out there. evaporate. i had clawlike hands, there'll be more cloud feeding in on that north—easterly breeze. quite a cool breeze. temperatures really quite low for this time of year, aching hips, and as i was doing the and there will be some outbreaks of light patchy rain and drizzle. exercise, they disappeared. the rain will tend to be quite showery
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aching hips, and as i was doing the exercise, they disappearedlj and it won't really aching hips, and as i was doing the exercise, they disappeared. i have been helped by coming out and doing amounting to very much at all, but it will feel quite damp at times. exercise. once we are in, we are now, as we head through this evening and overnight, there could be some clearer having a laugh and the conversations spells but there will also that come out of it is a staff you be some showers around at times as well. underneath all of the cloud, would never talk to anybody else temperatures will not drop about. we can say anything and it very low at all — between eight and ten degrees celsius. tomorrow, though, a nicer looking will never go beyond the blue tits day of weather in that it will feel a bit warmer, highs of 18 degrees. group. when we are in the water, there will also be some sunny spells around. the winds will fall a lot lighter but there could be something happens and a filter comes some sharp showers through the afternoon. off and it is great that everyone watch out for the fa cup final, canjust talk off and it is great that everyone can just talk about their possibly a bit of wet weather experience. your body image can be around at times. sunday, the nicer looking really negative thing but for us is day of the weekend. not. i don't give a monkey ‘s what i look like. i know what my body can do now and that is what is important. there are days when i am i will be back with the latest in grumpy and getting at everybody and there is swimming on the beach, swimming wherever and there is swimming on the beach, swimming whereverandl hello, this is breakfast, there is swimming on the beach, swimming wherever and i just there is swimming on the beach, swimming wherever and ijust come back so much nicer. i know that withjon kay and naga munchetty. here is a summary of this morning's main stories from bbc news: feeling and i have to admit they bbc news has learned that
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cross—party talks to come up have been occasions when my daughter with a brexit deal could be about to end, as the government and labour party are expected has asked, have you been for a run? to pull out without reaching an agreement, the bbc has learned. exercise can make a difference. it comes as theresa may has promised to set a timetable to leave let's talk to some of the people downing street following the next involved in that field. i loved that brexit vote, in june. film. i clearly feel very much the same way as you. why want to 0ur political correspondent swimming in particular? it came joins us now. chris, what more do we know naturally for me. i got to a point where i had to find something else about these cross—party talks? andi where i had to find something else and ijust where i had to find something else and i just felt... we where i had to find something else and ijust felt... we and it started they seem doomed. they do seem off just and ijust felt... we and it started offjust me and a friend and we doomed, they have seemed doomed for quite awhile, but i think the found this was quite good and rather fun and initially it was a bunch of leaders are going to be nailed on mad women going on but there is more top of the doomed talks very soon, to it than that. it is about being they have been serious talks, and they have been serious talks, and they have been detailed, but they together and doing something just a have collided with the political little bit amazing and a little bit scary because it is, every time we reality that was always going to be go in, a little bit scary and then ha rd to reality that was always going to be hard to overcome. and that reality is, beyond those groupings of people just get that wonderful feeling of togetherness and friendship... and around the table, each side was looking over their shoulder to the
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the adrenaline. 0ne tribes on their own side and whether togetherness and friendship... and the adrenaline. one thing i have they could take enough of them with been touched by this week is so many them with any deal, and for plenty men getting in touch. with so much on the labour side who are agitating ca re men getting in touch. with so much care and wanting to support. what for another referendum, they fear has been like for you and how has this made a difference to the home that that would get negotiated away in any deal. and for those on the life? i think it is hard for men to conservative side who are desperate to see the uk leave the customs understand what women go through and union as part of leaving the european union, they feel that get for sian to go out and spend two watered away and chipped away at. so hours swimming and come back and be the concern was that in the end happy... it is fantastic. it makes a there were just not enough scope for big difference for me and the common ground, and ultimately some on the labour side were also fearful family. you are the daughter-in-law they would do a deal with theresa and you have joined may and before they knew it she would be out the door and they would family. you are the daughter-in-law and you havejoined in the swimming be dealing with someone else. so as well. you talk about the women changing, what have you noticed? theresa may has said she would bring when you are in the water, something a deal back to parliament at the beginning ofjune, and then it looks weird happens. this filter comes off like she is gone. so everybody is now talking not about her and her and it made me realise that women my deal, but who is next and what that age not talk about what happens to older women. swimming with might mean. exactly, she will have a final crack at her brexit plan menopausal women has been getting through the commons, all enlightening. we have been having an
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indications are that that will be a extraordinary conversation this week. do you think that will change com plete indications are that that will be a complete nightmare for her, downing street will still work hard to get perceptions? i think women in their the numbers, and then it looks like she will set out a timetable for her 20s and 30s need to talk about what is going to happen and it is ok and departure, probably spend some time it is all valid. the all ok message in office while there is a race for the new conservative leader, and then once there is a new leader in is coming through loud and clear and then once there is a new leader in the early autumn, she will leave it is important. yes, it is. it is downing street and they will take over. so who are we looking at? the something that is going to happen corridors are alive to the sound of and we do not talk about it but we speculation at westminster, and here are three faces who have pretty much do. when we come together the a nswered are three faces who have pretty much answered the question yes when asked barriers come down and we talk about do you want to be prime minister? we all sorts of things. we all have different experiences and we all have borisjohnson, choose to go through it a different do you want to be prime minister? we have boris johnson, former do you want to be prime minister? we have borisjohnson, former foreign secretary, the least surprising name way but coming together as a group, on any list for the job of prime particularly in cold water, we can say all sorts of things, is a great minister, esther mcvey, former cabinet minister, also saying she is way to talk through things. does the keen, and rory stewart, who has only secret stay in the water. absolutely beenin keen, and rory stewart, who has only been in cabinet for about five minutes already saying he wants anotherjob in what happens in blue tits stays in minutes already saying he wants another job in cabinet, minutes already saying he wants anotherjob in cabinet, chairing overall discussions and becoming blue tits. what was your bid of prime minister. there is, though, a
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million and one others, and here is advice? i think you have to be a smattering. 0therwise million and one others, and here is a smattering. otherwise we would be careful laughter very careful around going through the pack of cards until you guys close up at 8:a5 ladies in the menopause... you have a.m., we have met hancock, jeremy hunt, liz truss, the secretary of been careful? yes. to give them their space is very important and to the treasury, all sorts of names and mps will whittle that list down to support them. i support her in the just two candidates. around 100,000 conservative party members the blue tits swimming. keeping her mom. length and breadth of the country will have the awesome responsibility of selecting on behalf of 65 million people who will be our next prime that is such an important role. —— minister. and i suppose it is hard keeping her warm. i'm to know because we don't know that is such an important role. —— keeping herwarm. i'm going that is such an important role. —— exactly when theresa may will say keeping her warm. i'm going to have to dig the wetsuit. we are at the she is going, but i suppose the obvious question is when do we roughly think we will have a new botanical gardens all morning. and prime minister in place? that is the jane is in the butterfly garden. question, isn't it? at the moment we are still talking about timetables good morning jane, change is such a about timetables. the timetable now beautiful thing. we are making sense is that the prime minister will say of the theme all week, which is something else about her timetable
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in about three weeks' time, and then transformation and any big hormonal she will set the parameters for how long this race will go on, and change, adolescents, pregnancy, surprise surprise, there is politics and arguing about how long it should menopause, leads to transformation. go on, various candidates thinking along or a short race is in their this is the start of the process and best interests. some suggest a short at the end result, after about a race might be in the interest of some who want to grab hold of the month, is these beautiful brexit process now, while a longer butterflies. so many women saying it race might be in the interest of isa butterflies. so many women saying it is a new chapter, a second spring. others like sajid javid orjeremy today we will be breaking the final hunt who would like to project an taboo which is what? incontinence image about the future outside of and pelvic thrust. this is important the european union, with brexit already sorted. so the two things we for all women. we won't be from a will be looking for are is it really quick, and does it happen by the end ofjuly, or do we have a race that goes on all summer, a rubber chicken circuit, as it has been dubbed in ten ten p. the past, where the two wannabes have lots of dinners to try and persuade people, and we hear good morning from bbc london news. something at the conference at the
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beginning of october. said the brexit timetable determines theresa iam tara i am tara welsh. may's timetable, which determines tests for co nta m i na nts the leadership race timetable. lots from the grenfell tower fire are underway at one of hammersmith and fulham council's of timetables, thank you.” largest housing estates. experts are getting ready the leadership race timetable. lots of timetables, thank you. i wonder what we will be doing for the next to take soil samples at the edward woods estate, few weeks? keeping busy. which is just over half a mile away for the first time, doctors from the tower. they'll be tesing for substances in the uk have successfully used that could potentially cause keyhole surgery to treat a baby boy asthma and cancer. with spina bifida inside the womb. the councils says it plans the team from king's college to discuss the findings hospital in london say the procedure with residents in june. isn't a cure, but improves the baby's future chances of walking, and is safer for a thanksgiving service the mother than invasive surgery. is being held at westminster abbey to celebrate 1000 years of women in the met police. three british people and a south african citizen have on this day in 1919, been killed after a small members of the newly—formed female plane crashed in dubai. police appeared in their uniform the crew of the plane had been for the first time. met women dressed in the orginal working for a british—based company uniform will be recreating this a few miles from dubai international airport when it hit photo on the steps the ground yesterday evening. an investigation is underway. of the home office. it has been the workhorse of the great western railway, there are calls for the uk but tomorrow, the the high to consider introducing compulsory measles vaccinations before speed train's services children can start school. a team of italian researchers has through the thames warned that current policies are not valley come to an end. enough to control the introduced in 1976, rising number of cases.
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the iconic design has been a symbol however, british experts cast doubt on the idea, of britain's railways saying enforcing vaccines for more than a0 years. but its time carrying commuters to london paddington is now over, as the old diesels are replaced could alienate parents. by electric services. and mike hasjoined us for the these old trains, very simple, fuge sport. we are talking about mental health, especially men's mental health, especially men's mental distractions, really quite reliable health, and danny rose and lots of admiration for basically admitting despite what one may have heard and his struggles with depression, a lot everybody loves them. of support over that. from what he let's take a look at the travel situation now. is saying in this bbc documentary on sunday night there is a lot of there are minor delays misunderstanding still, a lot of on tfl rail services work needs to be done to help those between liverpool street to shenfield— it's because of people, not just within football but a faulty train. within the wider community as a other lines are running well. whole, to get men talking. danny rose says that a club wanted now to the roads, the north to meet him to check that he wasn't circular remains closed in both directions between crazy, after the tottenham the charlie browns roundabout and england defender revealed his struggles and the redbridge roundabout. with depression. and in kings cross: there's one lane the tottenham and england defender closed for roadworks eastbound says it happened when he spoke to an unnamed club about a potential on the euston road past transfer last summer. st pancras station towards pentonville road. he was speaking as part of a special bbc one programme about men's mental health. time for the weather with elizabeth rizzini i do think there's still a long
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way to go in football, because in the summer it might be in the middle of may but i was speaking to another club, it will not feel like it. very and they said the club would like to meet you, little in the way of brightness. you know, just to check that you're not crazy. really? patchy rain and drizzle at times and temperatures below the average for yeah. because of what you said? this time of year but a fairly mild yeah, because of what i'd said start to the morning. quite grey and and what i'd been through. and i was a bit embarrassed — dull out there. more ground feeding well, i was embarrassed into the north—easterly breeze. when he said that. quite a cool breeze. temperature is you can watch a royal team talk: quite low for this time of year. the tackling mental health on bbc one at 10:30pm on sunday night. rain quite showery and not amounting the duke of cambridge to very much at all but it will feel and our own dan walker are also involved in the conversation. quite damp at times. this evening and overnight, they could be some clearer spells but also showers it has been another eventful day, around as well. underneath all the in the controversial career of nick kyrgios. cloud, temperatures will not drop he has admitted that emotions got the better of him low at all. tomorrow, nicer looking as he forfeited his second—round match at the italian 0pen. it started with a row day of weather and it will fill warmer with highs of 18. bright and sunny spells. some sharp showers with a spectator. through the afternoon. for the fa then his racket went,
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cup final, possibly some wet weather then it was his chair. he then packed up his gear and walked off court. he has been given a hefty fine, around. lost his prize money, and had to cover the cost i'm back with the latest of the hotel that the tournament had from the bbc london newsroom in half an hour. provided for him in rome. plenty more on our website staying in rome, it was a busy at the usual address. day forjohanna konta. bye for now. the british number one had to play twice because of bad weather on wednesday. hello, this is breakfast, withjon kay and naga munchetty. it is 6:30am. we will bring you the latest news first she beat the seventh seed, and sport in a moment, sloane stephens, before seeing off and there will be lots more venus williams. she is now through to on our menopause series with louise, the quarter—finals. tommy fleetwood leads the british who is in birmingham charge at the us pga championships with lots of advice on how in new york. to get through it. he is four shots off the leader, who is the american brooks koepka. he was in brilliant form at the notoriously difficult bethpage black course. he shot a bogey—free a beautiful day, green sites, spring round of 63 to finish his first round on seven—under—par. tiger woods was fancied to do well has sprung, and some advice on how after his win at the masters last month, but he struggled, to get through the menopause. but also on breakfast this morning: and finished the day two—over—par. we will hear from the mother of the youngest victim to die in the manchester bomb. and this time tomorrow i will be at it is the first time lisa roussos has spoken about her daughter wembley ahead of the fa cup final, saffie, who was just eight years old, and we will hear how lisa andi wembley ahead of the fa cup final, and i will be the head chef of the
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is keeping her memory alive. we are also talking to the doctor who carried out a successful executive club hospitality meals. it pioneering operation on babyjaxson, is not just who has spina bifida, executive club hospitality meals. it whilst he was still is notjust pies. how many kitchens in his mother's womb. and, as easyjet release its latest do you think they have in the set of results, nina will be talking stadium? 98. a very important part to the boss of the airline about brexit and how it is affecting business. of the whole process. you will be stuffed by the end of that. you have to have something from every single one. watford and manchester city, of course, in the finals. here is how it looks in birmingham good morning. here is a summary of today's main this morning. a little cloudy, but still stunning. the botanical garden stories from bbc news: talks to try to come up with a brexit deal could be somewhere still stunning. the botanical garden somewhere among still stunning. the botanical garden about to end, as the government somewhere among the trees. and and labour party are expected to pull out without reaching louise has gone to end our menopause an agreement, the bbc has learned. now, theresa may has promised to set week of programmes, and she has lots a timetable to leave downing street following the next brexit vote, of gas to talk to. sticking with the expected next month. the former foreign secretary borisjohnson has said he will stand green theme, matt has a gorgeous in the conservative leadership view behind you, don't you?” election that will follow. green theme, matt has a gorgeous view behind you, don't you? i have indeed, from one of our weather watchers in county durham. it will for the first time, doctors in the uk have successfully used keyhole surgery to treat a baby boy brighten up their after some rain with spina bifida inside the womb. earlier on, but a lot more cloud
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the team from king's college than we have been used to earlier hospital in london say the procedure this week. on the satellite image, isn't a cure, but improves you can see this zone of cloud we the baby's future chances of walking, and is safer for have been watching coming in from the east. the rain is mainly across the mother than invasive surgery. parts of western england, especially north—west england, into wales, some of the world's leading experts southern scotland and edging towards the isle of man, continuing to push on the menopause are calling for testosterone to be made widely its way in towards northern ireland available to women who need it. as we go through the rest the it isn't currently licensed morning. then it will rain for a in the uk, despite nice menopause guidelines stating that it should be time before things written up and considered in certain cases. brighten up quite quickly into the the president of the international menopause society says that doctors afternoon across much of scotland, should embrace the treatment. northern england, away from the east coast. some sunshine for a time in the midlands, but for much of england and wales it will be cloudy we are preventing women from being for much of the day. some showers at mistreated by products that aren't for women. there's not going to be a times, north—easterly breeze, and feeling much cooler than it has soon army for women. there's not going to be a soon army of wanting testosterone. done. even though the breezes on the what we are going to do is make south coast, lighter than it has available a product for women who been. the isle of man, the are already being treated. north—west of england brightening up again. for northern ireland and much of scotla nd again. for northern ireland and much of scotland there will be blue skies 100 people have been stabbed overhead. through the second half of to death in the uk so far this year, the day, warmest in western scotland according to bbc research. where we will see temperatures peak figures obtained from police forces across the country show the largest at around 21 celsius. elsewhere,
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group of victims are men in their 20s. certainly a cool day the further in 95 of the 100 cases, south that you are. into tonight, someone has been arrested. lots of cloud, and this time scotla nd lots of cloud, and this time scotland is set to see lots of the three british people wet weather was in from the east, and a south african citizen have been killed after a small strengthening breezes and the winds falling lighter but still a few plane crashed in dubai. the crew of the plane had been showers around. many will be dry and working for a british—based company temperatures staying at around eight a few miles from dubai international airport when it hit to 10 degrees given the fact that we the ground yesterday evening. an investigation is underway. have got that cloud around to take us into the start of the weekend. the big picture for the weekend, low the uk should consider introducing pressure to the south—east still compulsory measles vaccinations means there will be some rain before children can start school. a team of italian researchers has around, especially the northern half warned that current vaccination of the country, scotland having a policies are not enough to control cloudier and cooler day, with the rising number of cases. however, british experts outbreaks of rain spreading into cast doubt on the idea, northern ireland. england and wales, saying enforcing vaccines light winds and where you get the it will be pleasantly warm stop quite could alienate parents. strong, that sunshine, at the moment, but there will be a few heavy and thundery showers around. more than two thirds of lgbt people get caught under those and you could say they have been sexually harassed at work, but most don't report it. get pretty wet indeed. 0ne get caught under those and you could get pretty wet indeed. one or two not too far away from wembley for a report by the tuc is believed to be the first major study the fa cup final day, but lots of into lesbian, gay, bisexual and tra nsgender people being sexually harassed dry weather as well. but if they at work in great britain. the government says it is starting have 98 kitchens, and it is to a consultation on harassment, and employers must understand cloudy, go and get something to eat.
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iamjust their legal responsibilities. cloudy, go and get something to eat. i am just thinking of pies now. once you mention them, that is all you the finalists for this year's eurovision song contest have now been decided after last night's can think of. i am always thinking semi—final, and will compete tomorrow night in israel. of pies. that is a surprise. it is clear from the massive will you have a party? are we all response that the menopause has an invited? maybe. the netherlands are the bookies' impact on families and it is favourite to win, but all something we all need to talk about. contestants have been warned to keep the competition politics—free louise is at birmingham technical at a time of renewed political tension on the border with gaza. and, after some uncertainty, gardens ending our coverage. we have it has also now been confirmed that madonna will perform, so it's shaping up to be a vintage been trying to break down the taboos eurovision year, all in all. surrounding menopause and making sure people are talking about it.” i tell you what, that probably is worth a party. do you have have been overwhelmed by the amount eurovision parties? i do, i have had of people getting in touch, having one with the children for many yea rs. one with the children for many years. while some of the songs may conversations, having conversations with theirfamily conversations, having conversations with their family they have never be absolute rubbish, the performance had before because of our coverage and the staging and the excitement this week. i have been trying to around thejudging and the staging and the excitement around the judging are and the staging and the excitement around thejudging are really read the tweets. emma says i thought
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exciting, apart from the fact that sometimes you just know who will get i had been losing the plot so tired, the points. countries will have depressed, anxious. this has their favourites. you can keep the prompted me to go to my gp and have songs politics free, you can't keep now started on hrt. i hope i can devoting politics free. it stems back to the good old days of the feel like me again soon. these has a 19705, doesn't it? it is really huge impact on our friends and interesting, we have had lots of conversations on the sofa about family. if you have teenagers, for mental health, talking about it in various industries and how people example, that can be a difficult should address it, especially in the time. meg matthews is one of the workplace. interesting that danny rose has been so vocal about his and campaigners and she has done this what is happening in the world off amazing interview with her daughter foot well. a really good documentary anais gallagher and if they are very airing on sunday night, which we will hear about in the moment. danny honest about how they have been rose got a lot of respect and admiration for opening up about his feeling. you know i have struggles with depression. judging honest about how they have been feeling. you know! have been going through the menopause for the last few years. how have you been finding on his latest comments, there are still a lot of things to be done and it? recently it has been all right. misunderstanding about the whole issue, really. danny rose says that a club wanted i think you sort of... come through to meet him to check that he wasn't the other side. you are a lot more crazy after the tottenham and england defender revealed his struggles with depression.
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the tottenham and england defender calm but at the beginning you are says it happened when he spoke to an unnamed club about a potential stressed out and stressful to be transfer last summer. he was speaking as part around. you were overemotional. my of a special bbc one programme about men's mental health. anxiety was through the roof and i would watch something like east and ido i do think there's still a long way is and burst into tears and you to in football, because in the would say you are not the sort of summer to in football, because in the summeri to in football, because in the summer i was speaking to another person at all. with your hormones club, and they said the club would like to meet you, you know, just to kicking in, which you hated me check that you are not crazy. saying, that was your pet hate... really? because of what you said? yes, it was. but i always had a yes, because of what i'd said and thing about your rooms never being what i'd been through. and i was a tidy but looking back on it it was bit embarrassed... well, i was embarrassed when he said that. all staff going on with me.” you can watch a royal team talk: tidy but looking back on it it was tackling mental health on bbc one all staff going on with me. i have a lwa ys all staff going on with me. i have always been a fussy eater and a new at 10:30pm on sunday night. the duke of cambridge that you liked fish pie and in your and our own dan walker are also involved in the conversation. wesley messed up menopausal brain well, danny rose is included, in the england squad you would cook fish pies every day for the uefa nations league finals next month. one player missing out, though, is ruben loftus—cheek. of the year. you bought seven fish he ruptured his achilles whilst playing in a charity match for chelsea in the united states,
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pies and i asked why and you started and could be out for up to a year. to cry. you need to tell your children because if you do not know huge disappointment for him. he about the menopause, you think they misses now a major european final, are having a mental breakdown. when and a brilliant opportunity with us. i found out, i are having a mental breakdown. when ifound out, i was not that and you know, in particular, his concerned. you really co m e and you know, in particular, his really come along in the last few months and has looked strong, and ifound out, i was not that concerned. you are ifound out, i was not that concerned. you are very grown-up for your age and we talk about anything playing with a lot of confidence, so so your age and we talk about anything so it was pretty easy for us.” i'm really disappointed for him in particular. your age and we talk about anything sunderland are through to so it was pretty easy for us. i know that when you go through the the league one play—off final menopause you cannot think about the after holding portsmouth to a goalless draw at fratton park, bigger picture but at the end of the winning1—0 on aggregate. day, however much you are stressed goalkeeperjon mclaughlin produced a man of the match performance, pulling off a string of saves. out and you think for me, your sunderland will play either charlton or doncaster in the final at wembley on 26 may. it has been another eventful day number onejob out and you think for me, your number one job and priority is to be in the controversial career of nick a mother. i think mums still get on kyrgios. he has admitted that emotions got the better of him as he forfeited his second—round match at the italian 0pen. with their lives but you had and everything is so difficult. but from it started with a row with a spectator. my point of view, it is like, as a then his racket went, then it was his chair. he then packed up his gear teenager, or a kid, just be
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and walked off court. understanding, don't take the situation too seriously, be lighthearted and help them to have fun and just talk. it is all about what's going on with him, because he's really... he said his emotions talking and being honest. my main got away from him, it happens a lot. piece of advice is just talk. love he has been given a hefty fine, lost his prize money, and had to cover the cost you lots. love you too. thank you of the hotel that the tournament had provided for him in rome. it just went itjust went on for ages, a full tantrum. staying in rome, it was a busy day forjohanna konta. for those two for being supremely the british number one had to play twice because of bad weather on wednesday. honest. being understanding, that is first she beat the seventh seed, sloane stephens, before seeing off really, really helpful. i am talking venus williams. she is now through to the quarter—finals. to melanie and her daughter becky. in the last half an hour, tell us about menopause and how it israel falau has been officially sacked by rugby australia. affected you? hot flushes that i he is one of the the sport's biggest stars, but was suspended last month over a social media post which said suffered from. i think i drove that hell awaits gay people. everybody daft having to stand falau was found, to have committed a high—level breach outside. did not want the wood of the players' code of conduct. burner on. i am glad that it is all tommy fleetwood leads the british charge at the us pga championships
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in new york. he is four shots off the leader, who is the american brooks koepka. over. it could have been worse. now he was in brilliant form at the notoriously difficult bethpage black course. he shot a bogey—free round of 63, to finish his first she will be going through it again. round on seven—under—par. what has happened? unfortunately i tiger woods was fancied to do well after his win at the masters last was diagnosed with cancer at the month, but he struggled, beginning of this year and i have to and finished the day two—over—par. have an operation to remove it but i and britain's bianca walkden is on course to retain her title at the world taekwondo now have to take tablets for the championships in manchester. next five years which stops the the world number one, seen here fighting in the blue, is going for her third title in the heavyweight division. the final is tonight. oestrogen which means i will basically be going through menopause again, so really, ijust have got to in the men's competiton, bradley sinden is also go through it and suffer it and through to the final, and is on course to become britain's first male world champion. everybody around me will have to have the windows and doors open. i it is good to know that i didn't jinx them by filming with them last cannot wait to get back to the cold week. feeling the force of their water swimming so i can enjoy myself crescent shot. maybe you helped and actually tried to let it all go. them. i am glad you are on that we might all be going through it, side, iam them. i am glad you are on that side, i am a bit scared of you now. but it causes ripples in the family.
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and matt taylor has clouds with him, it does. how do you prepare again?” thatis and matt taylor has clouds with him, that is what he is armed with. do not. she just has the windows terrifying, matt. good morning to you. it has made for a lovely start open and we just put her outside in for some. this was a shot taken in the cold weather. just basically we north yorkshire to begin the day, a little bit of sunshine peeking have to deal with it. it was quite through the cloud after some rain in the early hours of the morning. the rain is on its way westwards. this cold last night! i learned so much area of rain on the satellite image, idid say area of rain on the satellite image, i did say the word rain, it is about a few of the symptoms. so many pushing through parts of the midlands and this was it during the questions and i was really ignorant. last few hours through the midlands, i thought this would not happen north—west england, some heavy until i was 55 so many different bursts of rain here. it will continue to work across some parts things that can happen to you. mine of southern scotland towards the likes of glasgow and by mid—morning started really quite early. in across belfast and parts of northern ireland as well. things u nfortu nately i started really quite early. unfortunately i lost my father to will brighten up once that rain clears away but there will be a lot cancer and that is what started and more cloud around, especially across despite my menopause. it kicked in parts of eastern, southern england and also southern parts of wales, during that. whether it started with where even into the afternoon there will be a few spots of rain around, stress, i do not know, but that is coming and going, nothing when it can ten. i started to do desperately wet. a breeze not as
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strong across southern counties as it was earlier in the week, but with menopause bingo because there are 3a different symptoms. it is fun to go the cloud it will feel cooler. sunshine returning to north wales in through them and tick them off. cold north—west england, for the likes of water swimming really helps you. we the isle of man and northern ireland, and a lot more sunshine would like to know from you as well what makes you feel better and through the afternoon across again, from families, what it is you scotland. in the west, temperatures peaking at 20 or 21 celsius, 70 can do. we are here throughout the fahrenheit, into the high teens morning and we have the listening across scotland and northern ireland but england and wales feeling much project, from radio for. annabel, cooler given the fact we haven't got for example, who has early menopause much sunshine around. as we go through tonight, wetter weather for scotland. we will still see some is talking in there and those outbreaks of rain and drizzle coming conversations will be saved for and going across england and wales, not too much, most places will be posterity and put in the british library. we will have more, dry. more cloud, so temperatures will hold up at about eight to 10 degrees. that is the one upside of particularly on men on how they can the cloud, the mornings will not be support and also support them. quite as chilly. with the weekend upon us, low pressure to the south—east. there will still be some rain in the forecast at this time it is the northern flank of that easyjet figures are out this morning, and the low—cost airline pressure system. rain coming and has just said profits are down. going through the day, a cloudy and nina is here with the figures. easyjet operates domestic and international services on more cool day, the same in northern 1,000 routes in more
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than 30 countries. ireland. england and wales lighter but, like other travel companies it winds. there will be some sunshine around, and once that son is on your has been hit by brexit uncertainty. back, it will feel quite warm yesterday we learned that indeed. there will be some heavy and thomas cook are down by £1.5billion, thundery showers. they will be quite easyjet have just announced losses slow—moving. get caught by one and of £275million for the last six months — they will be with you for quite that's despite an incease awhile. they will never be too far in customer numbers of more than 13%. away from wembley. for the cup final johan lundgren is the chief executive of easyjet day, it will be largely dry with and joins us now. some sunshine. for those heading to the north—west 200 and northern good morning. these losses were in ireland, be prepared there could be some wet weather during the day at times as well. still some rain line with your predictions but it is coming and going across scotland on wiring, the headline figure, that sunday, not quite as chilly. some brightness breaking through the you are feeling more seats but cloud and for england and wales, a losing more money. let mejust you are feeling more seats but day of some cloud, some sunny losing more money. let me just say that first of all it is completely spells, one or two showers, mainly in line with expectation so it is for the northern half of england and not really news. there is no airline wales. further south, for the northern half of england and wales. furthersouth, most places staying dry and it should feel quite that expects to make any money in pleasa nt staying dry and it should feel quite pleasant in that sunshine. well, the winter season which is a we're used to it now, aren't we? we loss—making season so i think the results are in line with previous feel that the time has come. once you get some sunshine even on those yea rs, if results are in line with previous years, if you take into account that we are a bigger airline and we have cloudy days, you will feel the
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benefit of some quite strong had a shift of easter, in the second sunshine. then we need to be covering up as well. thank you very half which is a very profitable part much. britain's high street has been which is not included in the number through a tough time recently, with big names like debenhams and house of fraser suffering. but what can be done to fix things? but it is a tougher environment, thatis but it is a tougher environment, that is absolutely sure. even if you compare it seasonally, they are we talk to the guest working on disappointing results? it is that. good morning. according to the plan because it yes the high street has had reflects the size of the airline. some pretty high profile casualties; 2,a81 stores disappeared last year, and some experts have speculated that it may not have a future at all. the trading environment is different. the competitive landscape last year the government is different. we had the bankruptcy asked sirjohn timpson — chairman of timpsons — to look at ways of reviving the high street. of monarch at the end of 2017 that among his recommendations were setting up a local task force to address problems, made the competitive environment lobbying government to reduce restrictions for growth, more benign. we should also remember and asking each town to have a "high street perfect day" that we have had a record number of where they show off customers for the winter. the what they're good at. sirjohn joins me now. customers for the winter. the customer satisfaction with our crew has hit an all—time high. so a lot
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just down the road from here, your of things that have been good about the performance over the winter. you first show shop. we sold the shops. have predicted concerns over brexit uncertainty. that would imply that 19605. and today they are having the perfect day. how will you revitalise consumer confidence is high looking at the passenger number increases? the high street? this isjust a we tend to do better in times of simple thing to help be more positive. we have nicked it from our more uncertainty and the environment business. for the last ten years we because we are positioned very much in europe and in the uk as number have had our perfect day, simply the one as value for money and that in day on which we expect every one of times of uncertainty and pressure on our shops and offices to be perfect. the pricing, people will look to you cannot expect people to do the those companies. we also have the second strongest balance sheet in spring cleaning and house keeping the world of aviation so we have every week but you can once a year. soi every week but you can once a year. so i thought, why not on the high many things to go through that street. we are trying today in people are attracted to. with that in mind, if that is what people are nottingham. they have still some way to go. a lot of letter about but
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attracted to, can you guarantee you they have been lit up patrols and will not pass on the debt to big cleaning operations. shops are passengers and your prices? we will trying to make sure they are as good as they possibly can be, as a way of a lwa ys passengers and your prices? we will always be attractive in terms of prices. there is pressure on pricing lifting things. i know it will not out there. some amazing deals to be deal with the long—term problems but done now if you are planning to book a holiday or flying to europe. it brings positivity and putting a done now if you are planning to book a holiday orflying to europe. i would suggest everybody goes on to smile on the face of people in the website and make a deal of a nottingham today. a big part is lifetime. you can go on lots of upside down governance so instead of being told what to do from whitehall, it needs to take control different websites. there are some advantages to brexit. but it was not inside. if everybody does not choose advantages to brexit. but it was not a no. all the headlines coming up to engage it is a mountain to climb. the first news, travel and whether let's not talk about the high street but town centres. the future of town from where you. centres is important to us and every good morning community through the country from bbc london news, because each place needs a central i'm tarah welsh. tests for co nta m i na nts hub, somewhere where they can meet from the grenfell tower fire people because social contact is a are underway at one of hammersmith
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very important part of life and we and fulham council's largest housing estates. are losing that. it is important experts are getting ready that each local community creates a to take soil samples at the edward woods estate, social hub for 20 years time. do we which is just over half a mile away from the tower. they'll be testing for substances have to readjust our expectations of what it looks like? i am notjust that could potentially cause asthma and cancer. the councils says it plans talking about shopping. i am talking to discuss the findings with residents in june. about other things to do with leisure, eating, drinking, health — a thanksgiving service is being held at westminster abbey to celebrate one hundred years all the things that people could do of women in the met police. together. make sure that planning on this day in 1919, members of the newly—formed female police appeared in their uniform includes that and also include for the first time. met women dressed in the orginal housing. clearly, you have more uniform will be recreating this photo on the steps shopping going out of town and online and we have as many shops as of the home office. we used to have. it is too many. it has been the workhorse of the great western railway, some of those buildings need to be but tomorrow, the the high speed train's services used for other things and one of through the thames those should be residential. the valley come to an end. report was critical of government. introduced in 1976, the iconic design has been a symbol of britain's railways for more than forty years. there are restrictions of being a but its time carrying commuters to paddington is now over, thorn in the side of development. as the old diesels are replaced have they listen to you? i believe
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they have but it is far too early to by electric services. say. they are taking action and setting up the task force so they will be providing advice to local these old trains, very simple, few distractions, really quite reliable, despite what one may have heard, groups, providing them with they've done a really good job, information and looking at planning yeah, everyone loves them. to try and make it simpler, quicker and more common sense. this plan is in its infancy. you were a keen let's take a look at the travel situation now... lever. the station leave. you feel there are minor delays on the dlr between bank and lewisham that way now? we don't know that we and woolwich arsenal due to a signal failure. 0nto the roads, the north are going to leave. haven't we all circular remains closed in both directions between the charlie browns roundabout and the redbridge roundabout. been confused? are going to leave. haven't we all been confused ? i are going to leave. haven't we all been confused? i didn't exactly say that last time. i said you just could not have forecast at that time long delays on the m25 due to a — almost three years ago — what we are going through. we still don't crash involving several vehicles. know and there is a sunlit gap where time for the weather with elizabeth rizzini
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nothing is happening. —— suddenly. i hello. good morning. it might be in the middle of may think five years from now, but it certainly not going to feel hopefully, we will know what we're doing. lovely to see you. hopefully very much like it today. there will be very little in the way of brightness and sunshine. an awful lot of grey cloud around. some outbreaks of patchy rain and drizzle at times high street date will open happening and temperatures will be below the average for this time of year but it is a fairly mild start to the morning. it's quite grey and dull out there. ina high high street date will open happening in a high street near you soon. there'll be more cloud feeding todayit in a high street near you soon. today it is in nottingham. in on that north—easterly breeze. quite a cool breeze. temperatures really quite low we've learned a lot for this time of year, and there will be some outbreaks of light patchy rain and drizzle. about the menopause this week, the rain will tend to be quite showery and it won't really biscuit... amounting to very much at all, but it will feel quite damp at times. and here's another fact for you — now, as we head through this women can lose up to 20 % evening and overnight, of their bone density there could be some clearer in the first five to seven years spells but there will also be some showers around after the menopause. at times as well. underneath all of the cloud, temperatures will not drop that is really wiring. that is one very low at all — between eight and ten degrees celsius. tomorrow, though, a nicer looking of the implications in drug help. day of weather in that it will feel a bit warmer, highs of 18 degrees. there will also be some sunny spells around. the winds will fall a lot lighter but there could be one of the ways to help combat some sharp showers that is through exercise. through the afternoon. louise can tell us more. watch out for the fa cup final, possibly a bit of wet weather
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around at times. sunday, the nicer looking day of the weekend. we are at the botanical gardens. 0ver there is the avery, you might good morning, welcome to breakfast be able to hear the peacocks. we withjon kay and naga munchetty. 0ur headlines. is it the end of brexit talks will continue this conversation on the bbc so far. —— couch. you have between the government and the labour party? after six weeks, it seems they can't agree on a deal. join in in your hundreds. thank you the hunt is on for a new so join in in your hundreds. thank you so much for all your messages. 0ne conservative leader as theresa may promises to step down this summer. of the of menopause is osteoporosis a first for uk medicine — how baby jaxson was treated and they can have serious medical for spina bifida in the womb implications. exercise is a great by doctors using keyhole surgery. thing to do to have strong bones. look at these wonderful ladies. very good morning to you and thank you for all of your messages and for more women are living longer after the menopause than ever joining in the conversation we've before, so having strong bones to prevent osteoporosis been having all week about is important, as fiona lamdin reports. menopause. today we are talking about how to be healthier, happier it is five o'clock but these women and how to help your home life. in birmingham are not leaving the office just yet. they are heading also, like — you need in birmingham are not leaving the officejust yet. they are heading up to the top floor for a workout. to tell your children about it,
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because if you don't know about the menopause, you'll just think that they're dedicated to those going through the having a mental breakdown. but when i found out that it was medical, then i wasn't that concerned. menopause. julie, otherwise known as "they wanted to check that i wasn't crazy." the words of england defender danny rose as he reveals that a potential new club the menno manager is a former pe questioned his mental health. teacher so she is perfectly positioned to run the class. and a lot more cloud around today, teacher so she is perfectly positioned to run the classlj teacher so she is perfectly positioned to run the class. i had a even a bit of rain, but when the hysterectomy when i was 36. three sunshine comes out for some of you in the north later, it will still people in the family died of breast feel quite pleasant. that's the cancer so story this weekend, i'll have all people in the family died of breast cancer so i was told not to take hrt the details later on breakfast. so cancer so i was told not to take hrt soi cancer so i was told not to take hrt so i have had to keep up my exercise it's friday the 17th of may. our top story. talks to try to come so now so i have had to keep up my exercise so now i have found i have mild up with a brexit deal could be about to end. osteoporosis so it is important for the government and labour party me to do the right kind of exercise are expected to pull out to hold that day. all of those without reaching an agreement, the bbc has learned. stu d e nts to hold that day. all of those students have one thing in common. now theresa may has promised to set they are all going through the a timetable to leave downing street menopause. i used to go to bed with following the next brexit vote — my cosy pyjamas on and now, you last expected next month. 0ur political correspondent
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minute with your cosy pyjamas and before you know it, you are flinging joins us now. everything off because of the night six weeks of talks but as many sweats. you understand what it is suspected, no deal. that's right. all about. you are doing the class good morning. a2 days. i wasjust counting them up in my diary a few with people who are going through minutes ago and there has been the same thing as you so that is serious talks, they have been much better in some ways than the detailed, but ultimately the gap between the two sides politically it gym which could be quite offputting. was too big. not necessarily the two sides around the table because they we re sides around the table because they were overlapped in ink sticks. of i have not yet reached the menopause that there is no doubt. but the but i have learned that exercise i tribes behind each negotiating team do now will have a huge benefit when have a vast array of views on ido do now will have a huge benefit when i do reach that milestone because it brexit, but some key bottom lines is all about building and keeping and for plenty on the labour side, any deal that waved goodbye to the bone density. and the denser your idea of another referendum was bones, the more likely you are not something they simply loathed. and to develop osteoporosis, a disease on the conservative side, any deal that involved staying in a customs which seems your bones. we build it union after brexit, they loathed, as up which seems your bones. we build it well. plus the fact you have two up to the age of 30, reaching peak parties who frankly i set up to oppose one another. the very nature bone mass. it says about the same of these talks are not something till the age of a0 and then there is that sits comfortably. for labour in
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loss per year and when we hit particular, a realfear that they menopause can be quite severe, up to might doa particular, a realfear that they might do a deal with this prime minister only to discover in the not too distant future that there is 30% loss of bone density so keep another one in the job. let's talk about that. theresa may has said... moving. daily exercise, moving every day, is beneficial. you have not got she has set out a timetable to go, meaning all the attention now is on who comes next. who is your money on? well, here we go. let's open up brain fog anymore? one answer to the the odds on the conservative challenge menopause brings is to leadership race. little tip if you keep exercising together. these are tempted to have a flutter. the women say it is a tonic for both conservatives often pick someone who you might not have thought of as a mind and body. push-up. it is hard, favourite. if you think of theresa may and david cameron and john major and iain duncan smith, none of those isn't it! you have to join in. it is with a front runners at the start of the contest. who do we have on the starting grid right now? there's a few who have said definitively that they will be keen on getting the absolutely brilliant being out here this morning. i want to talk to you job. borisjohnson, even though i am disturbing you. how they will be keen on getting the job. boris johnson, surprise surprise. former foreign secretary does menopause make you feel? desi, saying yesterday he will definitely be in the mix. esther mcvey, former
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forgetful. the —— desi. cabinet minister, pretty keen. rory stewart, new to the cabinet, rather keen on an upgrade for him around the cabinet table. quite keen on chairing them and being prime does menopause make you feel? desi, forgetful. the -- desi. it is cutting through now. i will let you minister himself. as for others who haven't quite said yes when asked go. do you have psychological the question, but sure i keen... there is a smorgasbord. a smorgasbord. a whole card set. there symptoms? sometimes it is really no end of people who are talked ha rd to symptoms? sometimes it is really hard to feel and cope with the about. in the mix you have the emotion of it all. you feel up, down, angry, overwhelmed so a lot of foreign secretary, jeremy hunt. health secretary matt hancock. liz emotions. and they come out of truss, chief secretary to the treasury. andrea leadsom, leader of nowhere? 0ut emotions. and they come out of nowhere? out of the blue. how does the commons. the list goes on and on and on and the challenge for mp5 this make you feel? fantastic. julie the commons. the list goes on and on and on and the challenge for mps in the coming months will be to whittle that list down to just two and then isa this make you feel? fantastic. julie is a fantastic instructor. 0ne roughly 100,000 conservative members this make you feel? fantastic. julie is a fantastic instructor. one of around the country will have the the things i have learned is that there are so many different awesome responsibility on behalf of symptoms. they are about 3a eve ryo ne awesome responsibility on behalf of everyone else of picking our next symptoms. they are about 3a prime minister. that could happen as soon as prime minister. that could happen as soon as the middle to the end of july, or perhaps the start of the symptoms. physical symptoms and autumn. but the big new thing coming mental symptoms, feeling depressed,
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tired and hot all the time. pretty isa autumn. but the big new thing coming dreadful, really. when did you is a really intensive race to take over from theresa may. it's started. it started quite a while ago realise that is what was going on? unofficially, but thank you very much indeed. four or five years realise that is what was going on? four orfive years ago. realise that is what was going on? four or five years ago. my symptoms have got worse. this makes you feel that will keep us busy. especially better? it does. let's talk to this him. young lady here. you are fluid? i am one of the world's leading experts is calling for testosterone replacement therapy to be made widely available and it's wonderful and it is thanks to women who need it. the treatment isn't currently to good exercise and support from licensed for doctors to prescribe to menopausal women. breakfast‘sjohn maguire has more. sophie claus was in her early 305 other people. so many of us are when she started the menopause after a hysterectomy. still going through it and it seems i just felt like i'd gone from being a 32—year—old like there is no when and when it to being 80, like, overnight. comes to an end? it is lovely. and as part of the hormone because you have been exercising, replacement therapy, along with oestrogen, you feel good. there is a way out. she was given testosterone, most often associated with men thank you so much. we're talking but also a vital female hormone. about helping and healthy about my libido had completely disappeared after surgery, relationships. meg matthews has done and that's come back. a wonderful interview with her for me, it was just kind of that lifeline. teenage daughter about how they have and with the oestrogen and testosterone, i've gone back to where i'm functioning kind
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coped with that. just to let you of as i was before — know, the listening project is here. slightly a bit more fatigued and forgetful still, let's face it, we cannot stop but i kind of feel a lot more talking about this now. it will be like my old self again. however, it is a treatment that many recorded for radio for posterity. doctors are reluctant to prescribe. now to the news and weather where at the moment, using testosterone to treat the symptoms of the menopause is unlicensed, but a major international conference you. featuring almost 900 gynaecologists good morning from bbc london news, i'm tarah welsh. here in berlin wants that to change. tests for co nta m i na nts from the grenfell tower fire there are a lot of women being treated with male formulations, are underway at one of hammersmith and fulham council's largest which are severalfold too much, housing estates. and compound therapies, experts are getting ready which are sort of ad to take soil samples at the edward woods estate, which is just over half a mile hoc prescriptions. away from the tower. by providing a product for women, they'll be testing for substances we're preventing women from being mistreated by products that could potentially cause asthma that aren't for women. and cancer. the councils says it plans to discuss the findings with residents in june. there's not going to be a tsunami of women wanting testosterone. a thanksgiving service what we are going to do is make is being held at westminster abbey available a product for women to celebrate one hundred years
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of women in the met police. who are already being treated. like all hrt, it is not on this day in 1919, suitable for every patient, members of the newly—formed female police appeared in their uniform but many here believe for the first time. it is a treatment that met women dressed in the orginal could make a real difference uniform will be recreating this photo on the steps of the home office. to so many women's lives. it has been the workhorse of the great western railway, but tomorrow, the the high speed train's services if you want to see more of our wake through the thames valley come to an end. up introduced in 1976, if you want to see more of our wake up to the menopause content, we have the iconic design has been a symbol loads of videos and really good of britain's railways for more than forty years. stories of lots of people. you can but its time carrying commuters search for it in the clips section to london paddington is now over, as the old diesels are replaced of the bbc i player or our social media channels. some of it is really good fun. it's by electric services. not all doom and gloom. it's quite entertaining. these old trains, very simple, 100 people have been stabbed few distractions, to death in the uk so far this year according to bbc research. really quite reliable, despite what one may have heard, figures obtained from police forces they've done a really good job, across the country show the largest group of victims yeah, everyone loves them. are men in their 205. in 95 of the 100 cases let's take a look at the travel situation now... someone has been arrested. three british people and a south african citizen have been killed after a small plane crashed in dubai.
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there are minor delays the crew of the plane had been on tlr rail services working for a british—based between liverpool street to shenfield it's because of a faulty train. company a few miles other lines are running well. from dubai international airport, when it hit the ground yesterday evening. an investigation is underway. there are calls for the uk to consider introducing compulsory measles vaccinations before children can start school. a team of italian researchers has warned that current vaccination now to the road. policies are not enough to control the rising number of cases. however, british experts cast doubt on the idea, saying enforcing vaccines time for the weather could alienate parents. with elizabeth rizzini hello. good morning. the finalists for this year's it might be in the middle of may but it certainly not going to feel eurovision song contest have now very much like it today. been decided after last night's there will be very little in the way semi—final, and will compete of brightness and sunshine. tomorrow night in israel. an awful lot of grey cloud around. some outbreaks of patchy rain and drizzle at times the netherlands are the bookies' and temperatures will be below favourite to win, but all the average for this time of year but it is a fairly mild contestants have been warned to keep start to the morning. the competition politics free. it's quite grey and dull out there. there'll be more cloud feeding we need one of those graphics like in on that north—easterly breeze. quite a cool breeze. chris had whether the conservative temperatures really quite low leadership race. what a chance of for this time of year, and there will be some outbreaks of light patchy rain and drizzle.
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the rain will tend to be quite showery and it won't really amounting to very much at all, but it will feel quite damp at times. keeping it politics free! now, as we head through this evening and overnight, 0ur arts correspondent there could be some clearer david sillito reports. spells but there will also eurovision — the fans are here... be some showers around at times as well. underneath all of the cloud, the rehearsals are under way... temperatures will not drop very low at all — between eight and ten degrees celsius. tomorrow, though, a nicer looking and representing the uk day of weather in that it will feel a bit warmer, highs of 18 degrees. is michael rice. there will also be some it's lovely to meet you. sunny spells around. nice to meet you. the winds will fall a lot lighter lovely to meet you. but there could be who wasn't even born some sharp showers through the afternoon. watch out for the fa cup final, the last time the uk won. possibly a bit of wet weather around at times. but, having spent the last few sunday, the nicer looking day of the weekend. months on a tour of europe, he has already got a taste i'm back with the latest of eurovision fame. from the bbc london newsroom i never in a million years in half an hour. thought i'd have fans, so to go to these countries and see everyone there waiting outside hotels for days just to get a photo of me, it's crazy. good morning. welcome to breakfast, eurovision very much prides itself withjon kay and naga munchetty. on being a celebration 0ur headlines today: of inclusiveness, but the question this year will be very much about exactly who is going to be coming to the party. is at the end of brexit talks? after
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six weeks, it seems they can't agree this is iceland's hatari, who are... ona six weeks, it seems they can't agree on a deal. award—winning anti—capitalist the hunt is on for a new conservative leader as theresa may doomsday techno. promises to step down this summer. a first for uk medicine. how baby jaxson was treated for spina bifida in the womb by doctors using keyhole surgery. and they had doubts about playing in israel given the political situation, but felt they could make we started the conversation, more of a statement by coming. thousands of you got in touch. however... at the end of our week you've been told no discussing the menopause, politics on stage? we're at a breakfast get together yes. looking at how it affects families across the uk. which is impossible, and a paradox. have you been told to stop talking also, like — you need about politics offstage? to tell your children about it, because if you don't know yes, but the line is blurry. about the menopause, you'll just think that they're we've been warned. having a mental breakdown. but when i found out that it was medical, but, while there has been talk then i wasn't that concerned. of boycotts and protests, so far it has actually been pretty will it be plain sailing through much business as usual for israel's eurovision party. david sillito, bbc news, tel aviv. turbulent weather? the low—cost airline easyjet is just about to update the city on how that party is tomorrow night on bbc it is doing. last month it warned that the uncertainty around brexit 0ne. had hit bookings. that party is tomorrow night on bbc one. at yours? yeah, all come back i'll bring you all
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the details shortly. to mine! it'll be great. i don't they wanted to check that i wasn't crazy — mean that! just looking at the odds the words of england defender danny rose, for the uk's entry. currently rated as he reveals that a potential new club questioned his mental health. and a lot more cloud around today, even a bit of rain. i will have all 150-1. could be worse. it's better the details here on breakfast. than the last few years. good luck, uk. you never know! it's coming up to 8:12am. louise is in birmingham it is friday 17 may. our top story: talks to try to come up with a brexit deal could be at the botanical gardens. matt will give us all the weather but it's about to end. the government and labour party still very one. matt will update us are expected to pull out without reaching an agreement, ina still very one. matt will update us in a couple of minutes. the bbc has learned. now, theresa may has promised to set a timetable to leave downing street following the next brexit vote, expected next month. 0ur political correspondent joins us now. chris, what more do we know next week might two years since the manchester arena bomb and the youngest to die was eight—year—old about these cross—party talks? saffie roussos. her mother was also injured in the attack. after extensive surgery she so much hope, well, a little bit of is preparing to walk the route of hope was put on them, but now what? the great manchester run. good morning to you, there was a she has given herfirst huge amount of hope put on there by the great manchester run. she has given her first interview alongside her husband andrew. some, quite a lot of scepticism in other quarters here at westminster and beyond. six weeks these talks
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have gone on, a2 days by my calculation, trundling on. they were i don't really remember a lot. i remember leaving, serious and detailed, but the and saffie had got my hand, political reality was the gap this hand, and she was between the tribes behind each pulling, jumping about. my arm was outstretched, holding her hand as she was pulling me, and the next minute ijust hit negotiating team was huge. many on the labour side would love to see the floor with a thud. another referendum, conservatives on ijust remember lying the whole head that idea, there and trying to move. conservatives very keen on the whole i was just phys — to see the uk leave the customs union, labour would like uk to stay i was just paralysed. ina union, labour would like uk to stay in a customs union. then you throw i couldn't move a finger, ina in a customs union. then you throw in a next labour side thinking do we i couldn't move at all. wa nt to in a next labour side thinking do we want to actually bail out the prime minister who is in trouble, and what i couldn't blink. will the new prime minister do once ijust kept thinking to myself, just keep your eyes open. and when somebody finally spoke to me and started moving me, theresa may is gone? and perhaps it they asked me my name, is inevitable we would reach this and ijust said saffie. that's all i could get out. point where they would just kind of i wanted to say, will you just run into the sand. and now we have go and find saffie? then i must have gone again, theresa may succumbing to the because the next time, i remember them cutting myjeans pressure of having to leave as off, and that was the last thing i remembered until i woke up. leader. some reports were saying how many weeks later? six weeks. that after this meeting yesterday six weeks later. what happened at that point?
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she was quite tearful, that is just andrew was with you. andrew was with me, and i can remember thinking, reports. yes, clearly it was an well, why has he not emotional occasion, because mentioned saffie? conservative mps in their were of a range of views in terms of what might happen, that a growing number and i knew, ijust knew. we re might happen, that a growing number were of the view that the prime minister had to be clear about her i thought, if i'm this badly hurt, departure, and for the prime and she was a tiny eight—year—old, minister there was that sense that then what chance would she have? the end was pretty much nigh in terms of her time in office. and all like an intuition? yes. of this of course in the context of did you ask the question? the government failing to deliver on its central plan of getting the uk i said, she's gone, isn't she? out of the european union. but emotion happening in that room, excitement and adrenaline flowing in it is a painful moment. plenty of others, as the corridors i can't talk about it. sprung alive to the sound of speculation over who might get the because it is so raw, and it is two years on. job. so who might get the job? who it makes no difference at all, does it? do we know is in the running? three no, it doesn't. candidates have pretty much said they will go for it. borisjohnson, still like yesterday. former foreign secretary, saying the least surprising thing on planet i feel like we're stuck in 2017. earth, that he will be a candidate. yeah, you do.
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it's amazing how these two years have gone by, but when sometimes we talk amongst each other, you're stuck in 2017. esther mcvey is pretty keen, and rory stewart, who onlyjust got a and for you over the last two years, balancing your bereavement, your loss, with your recovery, how job in cabinet, would like another job in cabinet, would like another job in cabinet, leading it. and the have those two things been possible? rest of the pack of cards, we can only fit so many on one screen at ifelt like i needed to be strong, one time. we can have page after page of contenders likejeremy hunt, and i needed to be the best i could be before i could deal with the loss of saffie. foreign secretary, liz truss, the chief treasury secretary, who are i had to learn to walk again. pretty keen. all of these will be the first few steps around the ward, whittled down to two, and then it i felt like i'd run a marathon, didn't i? will be the awesome responsibility of about 100,000 conservative i was out of breath, sweating. members up and down the country to it was only about five steps. decide on behalf of 60 million people who our next prime minister the hand, i think the progress will be. thank you very much. two it is a lot slower with my hand. that's been reconstructed ? is like the beginning of the it's been reconstructed, yes. apprentice, you are fired. there's still a lot of numbness for the first time, doctors in it, and nerve damage. taking part in the great in the uk have successfully used manchester run has given keyhole surgery to treat a baby boy you a goal, has it?
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with spina bifida inside the womb. yes, it's let me look further the team from king's college hospital in london say the procedure into the future than i normally do. isn't a cure, but improves the baby's future chances of walking, and is safer for and it's the start of the charity, the mother than invasive surgery. the launch of the charity, here is our health and science so it's all good and positive. correspondent james gallagher. baby jaxson is just a few weeks old, the charity needs to be but more than two months ago, there to help victims of terrorism. there is no help. he had pioneering do you feel let down? surgery on his spine. by the government, definitely. doctors operated onjaxson while he was still inside his mother's womb. it was offered — £5,500 each for the death of saffie. his mum, sherrie, said it was a shock to find out through the compensation scheme? he had spina bifida. it was a very high—risk through the compensation scheme, that's the maximum. it's a complete insult. pregnancy from the start, taking part in the run in manchester, how will that feel, anyway, through being do you think, being back here? told i couldn't have babies, and everything. i know it's going to be emotional, not just for me, for all of us that's walking. so any decision we've had to make, i've made it purely for the fact that he is meant to be here. but it's a good thing, and we need — we need it, don't we? you know, it's — he'sjust — something good's got to come out he's fought every day. of something so awful. it was these pregnancy scans that showed jaxson's spine and spinal it's got to. cord were not developing properly.
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spina bifida can lead to paralysis and affect bladder and bowel control, but surgery in the womb can reduce the risk of complications later in life. well, in response, we are operating on very the government says it has worked to ensure victims of terrorism receive "effective and comprehensive delicate structures. support" which includes a 2a—hour support line. the foetus nerves, and coverage of the great that they are exposed, manchester run will be the foetus itself is very small, and we are operating on a foetus presented by gabby logan, live on bbc2 from 12pm inside the womb, so obviously it's on sunday, with a highlights a very delicate operation. this is how it works. three small incisions programme to follow at 5pm. were made in sherrie's bump. a thin camera and small surgical tools were inserted into her womb, good luck to everybody taking part then surgeons put the spinal cord in all sorts of activities this back in place and put a patch weekend. if you have plans, you are over the wound. jaxson needed to be looked probably looking to see what the weather will do and one man can tell after in neonatal intensive care when he was born. us this morning. he is not that way, he's this way. i can't forecast he has not been cured, which screen you are on! but his family hope they have given him the best start in life. a little bit of rain around this weekend at times but some dry, warm, some of the world's leading experts on the menopause are calling sunny weather. cloudy and damp for some of your self by this morning, for testosterone to be made widely available to women who need it. that was shropshire, this area of it isn't currently licensed rain working across parts of wales. in the uk, despite guidelines stating that it should be considered in certain cases. clearing from north—west angered by the president of the international three parts of scotland it is menopause society says that doctors heading in the direction of northern
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should embrace the treatment. ireland. we will —— it will be with you ina ireland. we will —— it will be with you in a few years' time in eastern ireland but will make its way west. if you want to see more of our wake allows a sunshine to return across parts of scotland, good part of up to the menopause content northern england edge of the afternoon but up much of wales, from this week, you can search for it in the clips section of the bbc iplayer, central and southern england, you will hold on to cloud through much of the day. further outbreaks of rain or drizzle coming and going. or on our social media channels. not a desperately wet day, a few glimmers of sunshine but feeling cool glimmers of sunshine but feeling cool. if you are up to the one—day international at trent bridge, a few three british people and a south african citizen have showers. 0ptimistic dry and bright been killed after a small plane crashed in dubai. into the afternoon. cloudy threesome the crew of the plane had been eastern coasts. lots of sunshine for working for a british—based company a few miles from dubai international airport when it hit the afternoon across scotland once the ground yesterday evening. again after this morning's cloud and an investigation is underway. patchy rain. warmest of the air will be in the western highlands. 21 degrees at the hi there this more than two thirds of lgbt people afternoon. most places in the teams, say they have been sexually harassed feeling distinctly cool across the at work, but most don't report it. south. tonight, the breeze picks up a report by the tuc is believed to be the first major study across the northern half of the uk and it is the turn of scotland to into lesbian, gay, bisexual and tra nsgender people see the wettest of the weather. if being sexually harassed at work in great britain. you showers elsewhere overnight, the government says it is starting plenty of cloud, stopping a consultation on harassment, temperatures from dropping too low. and employers must understand
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if you're up early to start your weekend it will a desperately chilly start —— won't beat. low pressure their legal responsibilities. for the start of weekend, not much in the way of isobars across england and wales so if the cloud breaks and the finalists for this year's you get the sunshine it will feel eurovision song contest have now been decided after last night's quite warm but we will see a few semi—final, and will compete tomorrow night in israel. heavy thundery showers developing, the netherlands are the bookies' slow—moving, could stick around for favourite to win, but all contestants have been warned to keep a while. parts of northern ireland, the competition politics—free. 01:09:24,014 --> 2147483052:11:26,722 0ur arts correspondent 2147483052:11:26,722 --> 4294966103:13:29,430 david sillito reports. scotland, cloudier, much cooler day. 0utbreaks scotland, cloudier, much cooler day. outbreaks of rain coming and going. wettest weather in the far of scotland. ten pitches in the south into the upper teams are so great news if you are heading to the fa cup final at wembley. the risk of one or two heavy, maybe thundery showers, never too far away. 0ptimistic, it should stay dry. which i could say the same for the north west 200 in northern ireland. lots of cloud around, patchy rain and drizzle through. driest across england and wales on sunday, bit of cloud but a brighter day for scotla nd cloud but a brighter day for scotland and northern ireland with one or two showers. that's how it looks. thank you. we will try to avoid the
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showers. i don't know if it's the weather for showers. i don't know if it's the weatherfor geraniums. showers. i don't know if it's the weather for geraniums. louise can tell us. all all week on breakfast, we've been having a conversation about the menopause, and today we're looking at lifestyle tips for coping, and how relationships are affected. louise is at the birmingham botanical gardens for us. she has been stealing the flowers and the plants from the looks of things! leave them alone! all we've done is borrow them. good morning to you all, thank you so much and thank you all, thank you so much and thank you to all of you who have been joining in this conversation. we wa nted joining in this conversation. we wanted to start to talk about it and i felt really nervous at the beginning of this week. i have genuinely been touched, overwhelmed by all the messages. i want to give you one example. this is amanda who says, thank you for talking about this. apart from the hot flushes i have no idea what to expect. at times my symptoms had been particularly bad, feeling depressed or downbeat. not like my usual optimistic self. i know what you
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mean! i chose not to take hrt, she said, but i've always exercised and found that helps my bone density and also my mind, especially during an early morning run. you all know that ido early morning run. you all know that i do triathlon and genuinely it has really helped me through this. it helps with the symptoms, every single swim, bike ride or run makes me feel a little bit better. i'm not alone in this and we've been talking to the blue tips, a group of women who love open water swimming. let's see why. we are the blue tits. we swim all year round in swimsuits. a lot of us are of a certain age, we are going through the menopause and we just find that coming together every single day and letting go of our inhibitions just make us feel that little bit better. i think i'm probably slap bang in the middle of the menopause. hopefully coming towards the end... for me, exercise takes the edge off it. gives me a reason to get out of the house. enables me to meet a lot of new people.
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yeah, keeps me calm. cold water swimming in particular has helped with the hot flushes. they kind of went away more or less straight after i started. you can feel really out of sorts and in a foul mood and you get in the water and you swim and it just seems to evaporate. i had all these claw—like hands, aching knee, aching hips, and as i was doing the exercise, they disappeared. just helped by coming out and doing exercise and in our case cold—water swimming. once we are in, we are all having a laugh and the conversations that come out of it — stuff that you would never ever talk to anybody else about. we can say anything and it's not going to go beyond the blue tit group. i think that's what's great is listening to you all. when we are in the water, something happens where a filter comes off and it is great that everyone can just talk about their experience.
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your body image can be a really negative thing but for us it is not. i don't give a monkey's what i look like. i know what my body can do now and that is what is important. there are days when i am grumpy and i'm just getting at everybody and then my phone goes ping and there is swimming on the beach, swimming wherever, off i go, and ijust come back so much nicer. wa ke wake up to the menopause! the peacocks have been very noisy but they are absolutely beautiful. jayneis but they are absolutely beautiful. jayne is in the butterfly house and butterflies are a wonderful symbol that change can be a good thing. good morning. good morning. change can bea good morning. good morning. change can be a good thing, absolutely. we
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are in the butterfly house. look through here and you will see the chrysalis. it takes about a month foran chrysalis. it takes about a month for an egg to become a chrysalis, for an egg to become a chrysalis, for the chrysalis to become a beautiful butterfly. we know it when we talk about the menopause that two thirds of women will manage symptoms, it might fly through it. but a third of women will struggle and that's why we are talking about it. we had an amazing message that reflects the positivity of this stage of life and what women are going through. emma, she says the coverage has made me realise i'm not alone. i belong to a fabulous club of strong, fearless women who are not afraid to tell it like it is. women, you rock! i love that message. we need to tell it like it is. definitely. elaine is a pelvic physiotherapist and comedian and you are breaking the last two boo of the menopause with humour. what is the
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impact? it's the loss of oestrogen. i've brought a pelvic floor to show you. the ligaments, the blue bits, i what the muscles attach unto. with the loss of oestrogen, your ligament change in structure. instead of your sweet chariot up where it should be, it swings low and the muscles can support you properly. a lot of women find when they become menopausal they start to leak. the rate is what? one in three women wet themselves when they laugh, cough or sneeze. themselves when they laugh, cough or sneeze. it's important emma is lagging this because the social isolation people feel is huge. that's the bad news. however, there is very, very good news, isn't there? we know that pelvic floor exercises can help the majority of women and cure a significant number of them. if women are doing their pelvic floor exercises it protects them against developing regina prolapse and can stop leaking. it also —— vagina prolapse. .
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prolapse and can stop leaking. it also -- vagina prolapse. . took us through the exercises. everyone at home, dojoin in. through the exercises. everyone at home, do join in. the action of the muscles squeeze home, do join in. the action of the muscles squeeze and lift. if you imagine you are trying to hold in wind you really don't want to let go, that is you working your pelvic floor. you will do that squeeze for a count of ten seconds and that is the first exercise. the second one is to do ten quick flicks in a row. that will be horrible! oh, no, it's going away. that's embarrassing, it's ok, it's going away. hold for a count of ten, ten quick flicks three times a day. the mantra is? we won't pay with 10— tens way. times a day. the mantra is? we won't pay with 10- tens way. how often should we do this? three times a day for three months until you dry and then once a day until you die. that's it in a nutshell. somewhere out in this magnificent site, the
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news, travel and weather where you are. hello again. we've got a much cloudier start to the day compared to the last few days. we've had an easterly wind bringing in that cloud from the near continent, and you can see here on the satellite imagery through this morning this stream of cloud moving in, and it's giving us a few showers and some outbreaks of rain this morning. the rain is pretty much clearing away towards western areas. and while it'll stay quite cloudy, there'll be some showers mainly across southern parts of england. some sunny spells, though, at times in the far north west of england, certainly across scotland and northern ireland throughout the afternoon, and that's where we'll see the highest temperatures, actually around glasgow and the north west of scotland,
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about 19 celsius here. elsewhere, temperatures lower than the last few days, but 13 to 17 degrees, and through the night we'll continue with this feed of cloud, and there'll be further showers pushing into scotland. the far north of england, eastern england through into tomorrow morning, temperatures overnight not desperately low, about eight to ten degrees, but we start off the weekend with a lot of cloud, and we'll keep a lot of that cloud both on saturday and sunday. there'll be some showers with just a few sunny spells. this is saturday, then, showers mainly across scotland merging to give longer spells of rain and then quite quickly throughout the morning. quite a few showers developing across england and wales. they could be quite heavy in places. there will be some brighter skies, a bit of sunshine developing, and maximum temperatures about 13 to 18 degrees as we get the sunshine coming through. that will still feel quite pleasant. and then into sunday, low pressure is still mainly in charge of the weather. light winds on sunday again, when the sun comes out, it won't feel too chilly, actually quite warm, but there will be further showers during sunday just about anywhere, but i think mainly in northern parts of the uk
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in this is business live from bbc news with maryam moshiri and victoria fritz. amazon gets hungry for takeaway meal—delivery services. it becomes the biggest investor in deliveroo's latest fundraising round. live from london, that's our top story on friday the 17th of may. deliveroo plans to use the cash in its fight with arch rivals uber eats, as the battle of the takeaways heats up. also in the programme, as beijing and washington square off over the future of chinese telecoms giant huawei. we'll cross to our asia business hub
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