earl elvis. earl elvis, sorry. earl elvis of east anglia.hen just a few metres away was terryjermy, who was the labour party candidate. and he was looking at a bit of paper and i was thinking, "is he practising a speech?" because we'd had no confirmation of the result. it turned out he was practising a speech, but we didn't know at the time. but you're basically standing in an empty car park with a couple of the candidates and a couple of other officials thinking, this is all quite low—key at the moment. but, of course, we're in the middle of this massive political moment. and when did you find out about the result? because you broke what you thought was happening on bbc news. so we'd been given indications it was tight by a number of the parties all through the night, but we didn't know which way it was going, and then one of the election officials, so not from a party, one of the officials spoke to a colleague of ours, chris gibson, who i was working with, and said, "no, she's definitely lost." and chris said, "well, you know, can we go on