tv Inside Out West BBC News January 25, 2020 1:30pm-2:01pm GMT
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. r u; its. anglia or the south—east until quite late. behind the rain band, more sunshine than we have had lately, but some showers, which will be wintry even over quite modest hills in scotland. quite a windy day, and increasingly cold. it is one of those days where temperatures will come down through the day, particularly in western scotland and northern ireland, five or 6 degrees by the end of the afternoon for the that rain eventually gets to the south—east, and from the west we bring ina south—east, and from the west we bring in a band of showers, and that could give us some snow in northern ireland, scotland and northern england, even at low levels, and also some ice for monday morning, so bear that in also some ice for monday morning, so bearthat in mind also some ice for monday morning, so bear that in mind if you have travel plans. monday, sunshine and showers, but we enter that cold air, so some of the shires across high ground in the north will continue to be wintry, with quite a lot of snow piling up on the hills of western scotland, and temperatures down into single digits, particularly chilly in scotland and northern ireland. deeper into the week, it stays
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chilly for a while but, by the end of the week, it's likely to stay milder with some outbreaks of rain returning more weather later. hello, this is bbc news. the headlines: a royal marine recruit has died following a training exercise on a beach in cornwall earlier this week. china's president, xijinping, has chaired a meeting to discuss emergency measures aimed at restricting the spread of the coronavirus — which has already killed more than a0 people and infected over 1,000 more. the virus has now spread to europe — the french health minister confirms three cases in france. at least 21 people have been killed and more than 1,000 injured in a powerful earthquake in eastern turkey. a charity offering mental health support to military veterans says it can't take on new cases because of a funding crisis.
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now it's time for inside out. in this special edition of inside out west focusing on bristol and the west country, with seb choudhury. this film contains footage of injections. i hope they missed us. do you think they missed us? i think they missed us. hey! did you miss us? well, we are back and have we got a cracker for you! are you ready, babe? take a big deep breath for me. hayley meets the lip queen. king. i have got girls coming in aged 14 or 15 and they are saying, look, my mum has said i can have them done. i am in the gym with men at risk of bigorexia we all share issues when it comes to body dysmorphia, absolutely not seeing yourself as others see you. and alex celebrates wrinkles. you can look your age and look old,
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but still look wonderful. new year, new you? welcome to our body image special. now, i don't know about you, but i love the way i look. apart from the hair, the eyes, the nose... and the lips. but you know what? more and more of us are doing something about these. if you are squeamish, you might want a sofa to hide behind in hayley mortimer‘s report. there was a time when changing the way you looked could only be done with expensive plastic surgery. not any more. it is like getting your hair done nowadays. that's the look i love. that's the feeling, juicy, i am over the moon. is there a particular person that you follow on instagram that you think... they have got perfect lips? yeah, kylie jenner. they will have things that kyliejenner has had done, so two
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mill in thejaw line, two mill in the cheeks and one mil in the lips. anyone can inject you without any medical training, insurance orany kind of regulation. you can even buy dermal fillers on amazon and do it yourself. but how safe are our sellers? ——fillers. you could have blindness, anaphylactic shock, vascular occlusion and that could lead to necrosis. but despite the risk, more and more of us are putting fillers into ourfaces. and i want to find out why. hi! so nice to meet you! this is great! tell me about this place because we are in your garage at the moment, aren't we? we are and it is now my clinic room. it is solely for my aesthetics business. lisa used to be an nhs nurse, but she gave it up two years ago to do this from her home in cheltenham. what sort of treatment do you do
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and what is your most popular? everybody wants bigger, to lips. so can you show me some of the product and how it all works? of course. so there are different brands out there. where do you get it from? i buy them from cosmetic pharmacies online, so i know that they are genuine ones. there are also medication, which needs prescribing, and that is the drug that dissolves the filler. and that is if something went wrong? if something went wrong, if you put filler into an artery, a blood vessel or anywhere in the face, it will stop the blood supply so you need to dissolve it. and you can do that procedure? i can do that procedure. lisa's business is part of a growing aesthetics industry, estimated to be
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worth nearly £3 billion a year. hundreds of people like her are setting up in their homes to satisfy the demand for fillers, but unlikely lisa, many have no medical background. hi, cleo! come in and have a seat. cleo found lisa on instagram. she is 20 years old and has her lips done because it makes a ——her more confident. she is here for her twice yearly top up and she is letting me watch. i am genuinely worried that i might faint. i don't know what it is, it isjust needles. so, first of all, look at me. why do you like to take a photo? i take it because it shows the client that there is a difference before and after. and also for my insta page. if, like me, you don't like needles, i would look away. at the moment, i am just going around cleo's border, so where you would put lip liner, just to sharpen and define the lips a bit more. what i do is put my needle in and then aspirate, so pull
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back to make sure that we are not in any blood vessel. so now we will do the body and that is what gives it the bigger volume. and that tends to be a little bit more comfortable. a little bit. not always. the eyes just water. how many injections do you reckon you are doing? 15, maybe? so if you look towards me, first of all... right, those are your before and after pictures. wow. they look like two different people, don't they? crazy. so your lips are done. are you happy with them? yeah, i am really happy. they are exactly what i wanted, yeah. they are the right size and i think because lisa knows how much to put in, she doesn't give you the trout pout. that cost cleo £170. her lips are now posted on instagram, along with thousands of others.
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she has got the look. it is all about the plump lips and flawless face. there are even apps on your phone that encourage you to try the look yourself. this is fuelling the explosion in demand for fillers. they are advertised in shopping centres and markets everywhere. you can even buy filler on the internet now. i bought this for £41; on amazon. and there are plenty of do it yourself videos online on how to inject it into yourface. now, there is a bit of a buzz in gloucester today because someone who is a big name in fillers is in town. jordan parke, also known as the lip king, is doing fillers all day in the perfect glow tanning shop. it is one of the many salons he travels to from his base in manchester. he is £20 cheaper than lisa.
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you might know him from the tv series, botched. you are asking for a horrible complication. and then i was like, oh, maybe i need to calm down a bit and not get hacked up so much, but i am obsessed with fillers so i decided to go and train to become an aesthetician and that's what i do now and i love it. these people have booked weeks ago to see him. that is the look i love. you look nice and juicy there. i will do it all the time, and i love it. yeah, you like the swelling! love it and it starts going down after three days and then lama bit going down after three days and then i am a bit disappointed. on an average day, how many girls do you think you see? i will do ten or 15 fillers a day. this girl hasjust
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turned 18. i have been wanting to get fillers for a few years. why? it sounds a bit silly, but i see them all over instagram and ijust think, i want all over instagram and ijust think, iwant mine all over instagram and ijust think, i want mine to look like that. again, for those of you who don't like needles, look away now. are you ready? deep breath for me. are you finding that girls are getting younger and younger wanting fillers? definitely, i have got girls coming to me at aged 11; or 15, saying my mum says i can get it done. is it right if she comes with me and signed a consent form? deep breath for me. you're not going to pass out on us, for me. you're not going to pass out on us, argue? a little bit. sit down. keep breathing. what can go wrong? the worst case scenario is in crisis, because if you block an
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artery it stops the blood supply going round the face and then the tissue dies if it is not dealt with very quickly. you can obviously lose pa rt very quickly. you can obviously lose part of your letter, but now you've had it done, did you read the consultation form? see, people don't really read it, but they sign it. consultation form? see, people don't really read it, but they sign itm looks like, you know that instagram filter. the instagram filter! and everyone wants to look instagram perfect, they want to look like a walking filter. that was intense. an absolute conveyor belt of people wanting to change how they look. this is more than having a haircut oi’ this is more than having a haircut or your eyebrows done and it literally ta kes or your eyebrows done and it literally takes a third at the time. but no matter what you think about lip fillers, this is the look that so lip fillers, this is the look that so many young girls want now. and you can't argue with how much happier they are when they walk out.
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what happens when it goes wrong? why do people go when there is no official body to complain to?|j do people go when there is no official body to complain to? i am a director of save face. save face is an accredited director... they had seen complaints from botched fillers double ina seen complaints from botched fillers double in a year. what is the law and administering fillers? dermal fillers are extremely dangerous and u nfortu nately fillers are extremely dangerous and unfortunately there are no laws dictating who can and cannot do them, so a layperson of the street could decide to date they want to start offering these treatments, watch a youtube video and set themselves up tomorrow as a treatment provider. what you want to happen now? the law to change? yes, i would like to see a change and some regulations to dictate who can and can't do these treatments, but every year the government declined to do that. the department of health told us it was exploring various options to regulate fillers, but it
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couldn't tell us when this will come into force. that looks pretty brutal. but what do you make that? let us know. get in touch on twitter, facebook e—mail me. coming up, the oldies loving life and sport. i didn't start running until i was 55. as a young person, i was one of those who smoked. i smoked like a trooper. never heard of bigorexia? it is a body image disorder where really must guys don't think they are big enough and become obsessed with the gym. and you will be surprised by the toll it ta kes you will be surprised by the toll it takes on their mental health. i was. i want to be the strongest in the gym and i want to look the best. everyone wants to get a bigger, everyone wants to be shredded and mean. we live in a world obsessed
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with body image. men are dealing with body image. men are dealing with the kinds of pressures that women have had for many years. but what happens when they way you think you look completely takes over your life? this man is a personal trainer in bristol. he got into body—building at a very young age. when i was 12 years old, i was doing 800 sit—ups in my bedroom and i had a six it led to an eating disorder where he became fixated on healthy eating. the body image condition, bigorexia, where he felt muscular enough. tell me about the body element of that. when you look at yourself, is it ever good enough? definitely not. if i were to take my t—shirt off now and do that, you would probably be like, you are not fat at all. but if i was to look in
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the mirror i would be like, i'm a little bit fatter than i want to be, which is absolutely ridiculous and sad because i have got a lot more things to offer than just a six—pack. things to offer than just a six-pack. and what does that pressure due to you? for me, if i associate myself with being this lea n associate myself with being this lean person all the time, when i don't feel like that i am less confident, less desire is to go out oi’ confident, less desire is to go out or even train or do all the things i really love doing because i don't look as good as i did three weeks ago. so it is an ongoing battle. i feel a lot more 0k in myself to talk about it now or stop i'm really lucky to have close friends around me that, we all share similar if issues when it comes to body dysmorphia really, absolutely not seeing yourself as others see you. the bodies dysmorphic association says one in ten men in uk gents are living with body dysmorphia. bigorexia is like anorexia but it
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can also cause low esteem... they say men are facing huge pressures to be wrecked. but now i am looking at two james bond, sean connery and daniel craig. it is really striking between the difference between connery in his prime and daniel craig much more recently, who is far leaner and has considerably more muscle on his torso. strikingly different icons of male body image. and diagnosis of bigorexia is often missed. they won't necessarily think of themselves as having a psychological problem. by definition, people who have got a problem but a problem so their solution is to become bigger and more muscled. more often, it is misunderstood as being part of low mood or low self—esteem and isn't recognised as a problem in its own right. i have come to trojan fitness in bristol. it is known for attracting body—builders and power
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lifters. do the men here recognise the symptoms of bigorexia?m lifters. do the men here recognise the symptoms of bigorexia? it will a lwa ys the symptoms of bigorexia? it will always be in your head that you won't be big enough or strong enough, but because they were always be someone bigger or stronger and it can be very easy to get obsessed with size and muscle. it is not a good way to go because you don't have joy your good way to go because you don't havejoy your training. good way to go because you don't havejoy yourtraining. if good way to go because you don't have joy your training. if you like you have to go to the gym to catch up. i know a lot of people who are my age and already taking steroids forth. for me, it is keyed to keep it at the stage where i do it because i feel good. gym owner, matt, is keen to talk about bigorexia to encourage others to seek help. you just want to be massive and as big as you can possibly get. i went to three essays that years ago i started training, and it gets to the point when you wa ke and it gets to the point when you wake up in the night to eat. people say you are massive and you don't see it, you just think i can be bigger, i can be bigger and it takes over your life. no one speaks about it because no one knows it is real.
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no one wants to talk about it because it might feel stupid or something like that. i like to think in here, we do keep our eye on people. weight right out, they go. bang on. 100 grams. this man is a champion body—builder from cheltenham and he is absolutely huge. he is and what is called the bulking stage of preparation for his next competition. with this sport, it can definitely bring about eating disorders. i see it in a lot of times, especially post—show. as soon as the show has gone, that focus, that thing they had in their mind that thing they had in their mind that they are working so hard for is gone and suddenly, they are lost. body—building, by its nature, is strict and obsessive, butjoe wants to win mr0lympia, strict and obsessive, butjoe wants to win mr olympia, the most coveted
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body—building title in the world. is this the biggest you have been? ya, this the biggest you have been? ya, this is the biggest i have been. looking at your size, i mean, may i? that is massive. that's a first. thirst for me on television as well. what is it like to share the gym with someone likejoe when you are a teenage boy? when i look at them over there, that is the goal. of course, it would be nice to look like a greek god or something but whether i will get there or not... i feel like i could. ali decided body—building wasn't for him and is slowly improving his mental health. he now runs a coaching business with his best friends, where a good physique is a by—product of simply having fun. you just get to play
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with your friends, having fun. you just get to play with yourfriends, rather having fun. you just get to play with your friends, rather than thinking i have got three sets of squats i have got to do today and if they don't do that i will really be down on myself. it takes to mental pressure out of it and our ethos is we wa nt pressure out of it and our ethos is we want to be able to play with our grandkids when we are 70 years old. thanks to those guys for sharing their stories. it takes courage. but you know what? not everyone is bothered about looking in step affect. there is a load of people out there who don't care about social media or looking young. but they are going places. fast. no i am alex and i am a sports photographer, with a bit of a difference. alex and i am a sports photographer, with a bit of a differencelj alex and i am a sports photographer, with a bit of a difference. i take photos of older sportsmen and women, thatis photos of older sportsmen and women, that is people in their 60s, 70s, 80s or 90s, even over 100 years old,
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who still compete nationally and internationally in the sport they love. i'm on a mission. 0ne internationally in the sport they love. i'm on a mission. one of the things that drives me is how it wa nted things that drives me is how it wanted to show that you can look your age and look old, if you like, and still look wonderful. the people that i photograph, the track and field athletes, who i really love photographing, they are doing things like highjump and long jump and they are falling and rolling around... they don't seem to worry about how they look. we all internalise ageism and we all kind of worry about it. i was just fascinated when i saw these people, who apparently didn't give a toss. they have world records. i don't know if people knew that. for all of these sports, no matter what age you are. let me give you an example. just so that you know if you watch these athletes competing, you're not
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going to go, oh blas. the world record for women in the 80 to 84—year—old age group for 100 metres is 16.8 seconds. just think about what that involves. he won the 0lympic what that involves. he won the olympic games in ten seconds, so a woman in her 80s is running at 16.8 seconds. that is so fast. i had an amazing thing happened to me in poland earlier this year. it was the world masters indoor championships and there was this indian guy with a flowing beard. but he seemed to run andjump with flowing beard. but he seemed to run and jump with his eyes closed. he was so serene. and jump with his eyes closed. he was so serene. somebody else was there and they said to me, you know who he is? is none is here. i was like, what? says this is a guy in his 80s and his nun is here in the stands, may be watching it compete? she was there but she wasn't in the stands. she was outside throwing the javelin, competing in the 100 to
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104—year—old category. amazing. that is an incredible story and we are really lucky in bristol because we have an jo currie really lucky in bristol because we have anjo currie living here. my name is anne dochery, and 71 years old, the title i have is the 2018 world champion 70 world duo athlete. yes! 0h, 2018 world champion 70 world duo athlete. yes! oh, gosh! can you believe it? no. i didn't start running until i was 55. and that was for very good reason. because as a young person, i was for very good reason. because as a young person, iwas one for very good reason. because as a young person, i was one of those who smoked. i smoked like a trooper. 20
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a day at least. so i started running to strengthen my lungs. i never, in my wildest dreams, thought i would win. but on the day, things went my way and i remember running down towards the finish line and thinking, somebody is going to ove rta ke thinking, somebody is going to overtake me. somebody is going to ove rta ke overtake me. somebody is going to overtake me. somebody is going to overtake me. i know they are going to overtake me! and then you get through and i didn't believe it until somebody told me you have just won a gold medal. while! it was absolutely... i mean, iwill remember that moment for the rest of my life. it still sends shivers up my life. it still sends shivers up my spine. at gallaher is another wonderful athlete. she lives just outside taunton and she is part of a group of friends who travel together and you always know... there are about five or six of them all in
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their 70s and 80s, and they travel to these events together, they rent an apartment and they sleep in bunk beds or do anything to make it possible financially for them to go. and i always know where pat is and where her posse is in the stadium because of the laughter. you wouldn't believe how much they laugh. i started running when i was 14, but i guess seriously since i was 35. i ran because i love the competition. mainly. go up next year for the 75 age group. it keeps me sane. people don't realise how much us oldies can don't realise how much us oldies can do if we have got a mind to it. you've got to be a bit stubborn and
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just get on with it. being competitive stays with you. i am competitive stays with you. i am competitive with my grandchildren, much to their horror. but no, i think it stays with you and the love of the sport. there are a group of us, about six of us and we have the time of our lives. i am the youngest. 0h time of our lives. i am the youngest. oh no i am not! sue is younger than me now. there is sue james. we compete against each other because quite often, they will put 65 and 69 is in with the 705, so we alway5 65 and 69 is in with the 705, so we always have a battle. so she is 69, then there is me who is 74, then we have ios, who will be going up to the 80 age group next year. she is a triple jumper, long jump and 5print.
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and then there is betty, who is triple jumper, long jump and 5print. and then there is betty, who i518 now. she does the distance race5. then as dorothy, who is 83 and does 5printing the 100 metres and a 200 metre5. they all do brilliantly. 5printing the 100 metres and a 200 metre5. they all do brilliantlylj metre5. they all do brilliantly.” think it is important for people to see the kind of stuff and the opportunities you can get up to when you are in your 60s, 70s, 80s and 90s you are in your 60s, 70s, 80s and 905 because i think people get really depressed about the idea of getting old. and it really made me rethink my own attitude to my body. it is drummed into us that we have got to look a certain way, use the botox, get rid of the lines and you know, there is another way of living. there is another way of ageing. if that hasn't inspired you, nothing will. i am off for a run. no, i'm not actually. i hope you enjoyed the show.
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hello, they're a good afternoon tea year. so far, the weekend hasn't brought anything much anywhere change. we have still got a lot of cloud and lists and marks and drizzle. just signs of some clearer skies starting to spread towards the south coast perhaps and also some sunshine across north—east scotland. temperature —wise, 7—9d. through tonight, this band of rain will push its way and from the north—west, working eastwards across scotland and northern ireland, wales and west england by the end of the night. the breeze tending to pick up, and partly as a result of that, it is not going to be an especially cold night. through tomorrow, this band
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of rain working its way eastwards, not getting to the far east of england until quite late in the day. behind that, these guys will brighten with some sunshine, but wintry showers over scotland, and quite a windy day in an increasingly chilly one. as we start the new week, it is getting colder with wintry showers and icy areas on monday morning.
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this is bbc news. i'm lukwesa burak. the headlines at 2pm: the death toll from the coronavirus rises to 41, with authorities in china struggling to contain the outbreak, as millions travel for the lunar new year. there are now known cases of the virus in france and australia — and a state of emergency has been declared in hong kong. we have a command centre so that we can get the views from experts and they can come up with strategies and initiatives. a royal marine recruit has died following a training exercise on a beach in cornwall earlier this week. a charity offering mental health support to military veterans, says it can't take on new cases because of a funding crisis.
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