Live Breaking News & Updates on English footballers

Stay informed with the latest breaking news from English footballers on our comprehensive webpage. Get up-to-the-minute updates on local events, politics, business, entertainment, and more. Our dedicated team of journalists delivers timely and reliable news, ensuring you're always in the know. Discover firsthand accounts, expert analysis, and exclusive interviews, all in one convenient destination. Don't miss a beat — visit our webpage for real-time breaking news in English footballers and stay connected to the pulse of your community

Wednesday, Oct. 13 is final day to apply for DSNAP benefits

BATON ROUGE, La. - Wednesday, Oct. 13 is the last day to apply for Disaster Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program (DSNAP) benefits for residents of 25 parishes affected by Hurricane Ida.

Washington , District-of-columbia , United-states , Pointe-coupee , Nutrition-service , Lahelpu-customer-service-center , Disaster-supplemental-nutrition-assistance-program , Hurricane-ida , East-baton-rouge , East-feliciana , West-baton-rouge , West-feliciana

Frohe Kunde fürs England-Spiel: In Wembley kann's müllern

Frohe Kunde fürs England-Spiel: In Wembley kann's müllern
oz-online.de - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from oz-online.de Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.

South-africa , United-kingdom , Hungary , Wembley , Brent , London , City-of , Herzogenaurach , Bayern , Germany , Hungarians , Englishman

DFB-Elf startet England-Vorbereitung - UEFA untersagt Training in Wembley

DFB-Elf startet England-Vorbereitung - UEFA untersagt Training in Wembley
ruhrnachrichten.de - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from ruhrnachrichten.de Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.

South-africa , United-kingdom , Hungary , Wembley , Brent , London , City-of , Hungarians , Englishman , Havertz-chelsea-kollege-timo-werner , Finalarena-trainingsverbot , Gareth-southgate

Spannungen zwischen englischer Fußballauswahl und Fans nehmen zu

Spannungen zwischen englischer Fußballauswahl und Fans nehmen zu
freiewelt.net - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from freiewelt.net Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.

United-kingdom , Russia , Soviet , Englishman , Lee-anderson , Express , Games-the-team , English-footballers , Not-want , Conservatives-dudley , Three-lions-look , Goals-are

Instagram будет навсегда банить за оскорбления в ЛС

Instagram будет навсегда банить за оскорбления в ЛС
5-tv.ru - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from 5-tv.ru Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.

Italy , Italian , Instagram , English-footballers , Windmills-will , இத்தாலி , இத்தாலிய , இன்ஸ்தக்ராம் , ஆங்கிலம்-கால்பந்து வீரர்கள் ,

BBC Radio 4 FM-20200226-120000

What will happen is if we do get to the position of more widespread infection we will monitor that as it develops we will take the best scientific advice as to how we may be able to delay transmission further and if that includes our actions through our isolate move more widely than of course we will do that in the past few minutes Lloyds Banking Group has confirmed its cutting $780.00 jobs this year across its branch network among the rolls to go or customers advisers banking consultants and branch managers the bank which has been hit by 2 and a half 1000000000 pound bill for payment protection insurance reported a sharp fall in profits last year the insurance firm direct line has also announced big job cuts around 800 posts within its u.k. Business are to go the home secretary pretty Patel has told senior police officers there must be no excuses for failing to cut crime speaking at a conference in central London Ms Patel signalled the return of national targets saying outcomes in key areas would be measured our home affairs correspondent Danny Schorr reports the home secretary's message was blunt the government was investing in policing providing funding for an extra $20000.00 officers so the service had to deliver in 3 years time when the new recruits were imposed people must see a difference said Ms Patel less crime safer streets no excuses she said Success would be measured against a set of national policing outcomes priorities would be to reduce merges serious violence and neighborhood crime the troubled high street lender Metro Bank has to reduce its planned branch openings by more than half after reporting substantial losses the group announced a pretax loss of more than $130000000.00 pounds last year in the aftermath of an accounting scandal compared with profits of more than $40000000.00 pounds in 2018. After 3 days of sectarian violence in the Indian capital Delhi The Prime Minister Narendra Modi has called for calm more than 20 people have died in the unrest which started with clashes between supporters and opponents of a controversial new law which is seen as anti muslim protection. Reports from Delhi In an appeal to the residents of Delhi the Prime Minister Nuri in Jammu the our citizens to maintain harmony and said that the police and other agencies were working extensively to restore normality this is the worst communal violence in the city for decades for the majority Hindu and minority Muslim mobs engaging in pitched battles with casualties on both sides there has been extensive damage to Muslim properties and businesses but authorities say there are hundreds of security forces in place and schools in the area remain shut today the measure office says more wet weather is forecast in some of the areas worst affected by floods and shops are and wish to share heavy rain overnight has caused the River Severn to breach emergency defenses with some parts of the river close to their highest level on record railway lines into shows pretty are closed because of rising water levels close to the viaduct cash handouts of more than $900.00 pounds are being handed out to Hong Kong's residents the move is an attempt by officials to boost the territories frail economy which has been affected by months of anti-government protests in the corona virus outbreak every permanent resident over 18 will receive the one off payment b.b.c. News this is b.b.c. Radio $4.00 now a novel inspired by the true story of 2 men on either side of the Israeli Palestinian conflict. And Rami who came together to work for peace after both lost a daughter a paragon by Colm a car is read by Stanley Townsend. On the clearest of days from the highest points in bad Jhala you can see all the way to the Mediterranean in one direction and to the Dead Sea in the other down below in the valley an orchard a watchtower a synagogue a minaret a military gate stay there long enough and you will notice the settlements a margin in a pattern around Jerusalem red tile red tile red tile coming together a perfect rim the rim of a tightening long there was a wreak to the prison in the canteen the shower stalls even in the tiny prison mosque mice fell dead in corners cockroaches the place was ripe with decay the days stretched out on a rack time was endless much of the Psalms time was spent in solitary confinement ritual called on him to pray on a clean prayer mat he used a blue cloth on which he drew rob the prison guard had so risked giving the cloth to him but some rolled it up meticulously without drawing attention they had fought it 1st he and I had so heard so I was raised an author talks Jew and had studied mathematics in Tel Aviv he was taken by the fact that bosoms prison number was 220 dash 284 something to do with what he called amicable numbers the 2 started talking but some learned Hebrew because he wanted to know the enemy if. You keep him close and learn how to bury him read the Torah know his file idolatry. Just about everything that surrounded by Saddam was enemy the food he ate the air he breathed even someone like Hearts on under occupation everyone was enemy but some was 6 years old when a helicopter landed in the hills outside Hebron he had never seen a machine quite like it before the soldiers when they leap day would look to him like green insects running up the hillside his mother ran down from the caves and shooed him home the caves outside Hebron were some of the most coveted places for farmers to live cool in summer warm in winter fragrant wood olives kept in ornate pots but some was one of 15 children in summer he slept outside on a straw mount under a tarpaulin side his father a privileged position it was Basam knew because of the guilt of all the children Basam was the only one who had missed the polio vaccine in a shallow cave asylum found the stashed grenades he and his friends used for the assault the army jeep crashed through the shrubs past the fence and general are shouting his right foot dragged he felt a blow to his head he crumpled while still running he tried to rise a foot landed on his neck his arms were tied behind his back a blow to the back of his neck knocked him out when he woke he was in a cell 6 feet by 3 he was 17 years old on the day he left prison but some called out his number from his prison uniform later he sent the cloth bag to Hertz on Hansel frame the badge 220 dash 284 and hung it on the wall in his office in the Department of Mathematics of the university where he had begun to work on ideas of harmonic integration. So Richard Francis Burton the Explorer translated Arabian Nights also known as The Book of a 1000 nights on a night also known as $1001.00 Nights one of sma diaries favorites was the tale of the hunchback who was assumed dead over and over again resulting in a string of confessions from all the supposed murderers only for it to turn out as revealed by the barber that the hunchback was never dead at all a few weeks after the bombing Rami went into smugglers room everything had been kept exactly as it had been the day she laughed her copy book on the table the photo of Shanae O'Connor in the corner of the mare he removed 1001 Nights from the book shelf and started to read the hunchback story you see cried the barber he's not dead as all what a psalm hated most about the prison beatings was that the guards would take away the prisoners clothes and leave them standing there in the great humiliation of their nakedness he soon discovered that it wasn't the 1st thump of the bomb that was the worst it was when he realized that it was not going to stop by the time the 7th or 8th blow landed it almost felt routine only had so would not take part in the beatings one see through it was of over Basam to protect him another guard pinned Hansel against the wall asked him if he had a polish on for camels and so replied that yes he was interested in the county his ability to spit without fear in an owner's face my name is Rami a one on I am the father of sma die I am a 7th generation Jerusalemite also what you might call a graduate of the Holocaust immediately on release from the concentration camp in a house which yet sank down on goat was given a ticket to travel on a ship to tell of Eve. On arrival you'd sack was met by underground Jewish forces and put on a bus to Jerusalem a job was arranged for him as a police officer he soon learned the language and began to fit in but he never spoke to his children about his experience during the Holocaust until decades later when he was asked by sma dar for a school genealogy project before I was fed worked as a runner for the rabbi in jar smuggling gold to the market the money was used by the rabbi for food and medicine in the evenings Yitzhak hung around the cinema and began to scalp tickets the Germans loved their cinema he bought half a dozen tickets and sold them at a little over face value one evening with a single ticket left over decided he would go in and treat himself to a sari Leander film The Great love what fascinated sma die the most about her grandfather's story was that a well dressed man had slipped yet sack a piece of seed cake at the train station in New York the cake was wrapped in a piece of newspaper on the train he owned for the newspaper and found an advertisement for the film the great love he had sag ate the cake but he kept the piece of news paper folded in his pocket but some had a small television set in his prison south black and white it received channel one in Hebrew with occasional Arabic programs on the night before Holocaust Memorial Day He switched it on to a documentary it came as no surprise but some was chewed into their propaganda. He would watch anyway he wanted to sit there to watch Jews die one after the other to see them fall starve collapse in ditches to experience them being annihilated 20 years old lying there on his bad by Saddam was waiting for the moment he could applaud had lunch time the next day as Basam walked along the metal floors to the canteen his balance was all knocked to how he lay back on the hard bed arms behind his head he had wanted 1st to cheer the falling corpses know your enemy keep them close under your feet preferably He pulled up the thin blanket to lighten the sorrow of the sorrow for he repeated his prayers he wondered why they did not fight back one after the other in their nakedness the most excellent Jihad is not for the conquest of self state your name but some hour I mean from Hebron age 42 who you traveling with my wife and children destination England where in England Bradford What's your purpose to go to university what your purpose in going to university to study how old are you 42 and you're studying Yes Did you finish school my studies were interrupted interrupted I didn't finish no why are you smiling I like to smile do you want to miss another plane Basam know then wipe that smile off your face and tell me where did you learn Hebrew after school I learned after school and then I worked for the authority 1st in sports and then in archives then I was a excepted into the program of Bradford. 25 years with that study and all of a sudden our I mean you're an intellectual I never said I'm going as a student for how long a year are you going to study the Shaw pardon me the Holocaust I heard you you're studying the Shoah you're an Arab you're a Muslim you're a terrorist 7 years in prison you attack us you throw grenades and now you're studying the Shoah is this some kind of joke by Saddam What do you think I am stupid I don't think you're stupid so you're going to England so you can tell us how the show I didn't happen know how many terrorists are you going to be meeting in Bradford. Once a terrorist can you define it for me you're asking me my wife and children are waiting we're going to miss another plane and I have to say that I'm a little terrified right now yes oh you're a real smart ass boss I want you I don't think so how many children do you have a psalm 5 I used to have 6 later he would meet English men who rolled their eyes when he mentioned Bradford nothing like Oxford unlike Cambridge. But he and sell well loved it the openness of the town the space the Green Park the low red brick houses the cafes the shops the falafel stand the Indian cop with the dreadlocks the ringing of charge balance the call of the moon was in the quiet street the kids allowed out to the park without worry the surprise of it all even out of the bowl of a grey English sky. In the library he read primo Levy and Darnel Edward Saeed he watched Schindler's List searched documentaries dog had pictures of the camps he began to work on his master's thesis the Holocaust the use and abuse of history and memory he wrote it in longhand he saw it in Arabic but wrote in English . He was the oldest in the class peace studies he sat at the back kept as quiet as possible still the word leaked out he was a Palestinian an activist he had lost his 10 year old daughter he was studying the Holocaust he was invited out to parties to dinners to symposiums he accepted the invitations one in Glasgow one in Copenhagen one in Belfast it was his curse he could never say no he didn't hate Jews he said he didn't hate Israel what he hated was being occupied try a checkpoint just for one day try a wall down the middle of your schoolyard try your food rotting in a truck at a checkpoint try it. He spoke of how he left prison not so much amount of peace but a man who wanted to pit himself against the ignorance of violence including his own . The irony then of the years that followed his marriage his children the piecework and then that rubber bullets flying through the air on an ordinary January day the smash of his daughter's forehead against the page. My name is by Samarra I mean I am the father over here. Everything else rose out of that. A Paragon was written by Colum McCann and read by Stanley Townsend It was abridged by Doreen Estelle and produced by Michael Shannon for b.b.c. Northern Ireland this is b.b.c. Radio 4 where now it's time for you and yours with Winifred Robinson Hello welcome to radio force conceive a program today the people who bought new homes built on flood plains will end up living in flood ghettos and the future may see areas where small businesses don't move into those areas people don't have flood insurance. Basically people can't sell their homes to hospitals and care homes failing to learn from avoidable deaths but not sharing the learning that comes out of investigations without that we're destined to continue the mistakes of the past and that's tragic and the online storm over teabags that started with the picture of the new chancellor brewing up and ended with this plea from the company on Friday the chancellor shared a photo of r.t. Politicians do that sometimes we weren't asked or involved lots of people got angry with us all the same. When celebrity endorsements go wrong has anyone famous ever put you off stuff e-mail us please you in yours at b.b.c. Doco to u.k. View on social media it's hard to argue and you also text us 284-8444 me it was going to and the scented candle. The world's biggest ticket resale website via gogo is allowing touts to list and sell tickets that the touts don't own Now that's important because it's breaking consumer protection law by a Go-Go has been taken to court about this before and by go go promise never to do it again but we can show that they're not keeping the word they're still doing it right now Shari Vols been investigating Sherry you're not allowed to sell tickets you don't own why not because it's fraud so if for example you go online and look for tickets for say an evening with Harry Redknapp as I did Top Of The list will be an ad for Vibe go go go go to 2nd reseller and you may not even realize that these tickets are still for sale at the theater the primary seller and the last says ticket touts using via Gogo must own those tickets 1st no one can sell you something they don't own but these people are why it's a con It's called speculative selling and once they know someone's paid through via Gogo they then go to the theater to buy the real ticket and on Monday 2 men would jailed for doing amongst other things selling tickets through via Gogo that they didn't yet. Boy go go shouldn't be allowing this though should they know and they've told you and yours that they don't allow it and more importantly they told the court they don't allow it but we have proved that they aren't doing enough to prevent it we were contacted by the lighthouse theater in Poole in Dorset because they couldn't understand how tickets that they still have in their hands up for sale for 3 times the face value own via Gogo and I mean the exact seats so you know as producer Natalie and I decided to test this we bought some of the tickets that lighthouse had for sale through via Gogo and Cyrus and George who's the head of marketing for the theater joined us on the phone as we did it what I've got at the moment it's not got the seating for anything with Harry Redknapp like and they are not screening tickets that have already been sold and I can see tickets that are still available for sale on my screen we are going to go on the Via go go website and look for tickets for Harry Redknapp at your art center the pool Art Center says it is the day we want and this is the dog's tickets Ok we'll get 2 tickets and what the Via Gogo website is producing for us is best value tickets and cheapest result so we've got a $94.00 pound ticket here sorry do you have any tickets available in row Ah yes so we do have available in the row currently Ok now it says face value per ticket of the ones that we're going to buy are 30 pounds but via gogo is charging us $94.00 pounds each for these tickets so we're going to click book now now. We are told that we have 9 minutes and 55 seconds left to complete our purchase Ok the seats we're looking to buy are row our seats $37.38 so if you click Ok they're Ok Now don't forget via gogo is a secondary site which means people sell. Via Gogo have already bought the tickets at face value and then selling them on at potentially higher value so sorry you are the primary seller so you are the sister do you have still for sale seats 37 $38.00 in row are for an evening with Harry Redknapp on Friday the 13th of October 2020 yes and 7 and also Kate a still if you know unsold tickets so I'm a little cookie how you would be able to buy tickets for those 2 seats because they are sold on our system so we're going to tap the button now Ok where watching thank you your order is now complete Are you saying anything Sarah I can't see anything for having that on Friday the 13th and those 2 things that you just mentioned going through that does that suggest that now somebody has sold you a ticket that her organization is now going to contact us by whatever means and now boycott kick you at the face value on our website. In order to then send them to you Yes Why round and does it confirm that email that you got the seat number of 37 and off she 8 that you just purchased Yes it does you still have the tickets in your hand or on your system yet you as the lighthouse they are yours to do with what you want absolute I've just given somebody 199 pounds for something that doesn't exist are you take it some valuable on Vi go go so that was last Friday night and the money came out to my account and on my credit card statement it says $198.00 quid via Gogo event tickets and guess what the tickets is still at the lighthouse are sent to no one has bought them yet so via Gogo should not have allowed that sale to me and another thing the courts told via Gogo that if tickets were from a trader by Gogo had to give customers that traders full details name address and. Details before they took any money and in consumer law you have to know who you're buying from before you pay but with the tickets I bought via Gogo only gave me the name before I paid and only gave me the address and company details after my credit card details are gone through and so when I checked I found that that trader doesn't exist so that's 2 more breaches of consumer law how divide Go-Go react well when the lighthouse told us that they delivered via Gogo nothing happened but when we got in touch with if I go there reacted within hours they pulled all the listings of the lighthouse theatre and all the sales being made by this mysterious or fictitious trader and they said it appears these traders were selling trying to sell tickets they didn't have this was an unacceptable situation and the company took swift action to remove all these listings and banned the trader in the u.k. Could it be just an unfortunate one off well Natalie and I looked for via Go Go on tickets on a number of shows at about 10 theaters across England we've spoken to the theatres and there are loads of the seats available for sale on via go go with different traders and we know those seats are still available at the theatre and it means the touts don't own the tickets they're selling and that's fraught showy Thank you all Mike under-used leads a national trading standards eek rhyme team it brought the prosecution that ended with 2 touts being jailed only this week for selling tickets they didn't own and that case gives you an idea of the money to be had from doing this those 2 people had made between them 7000000 pounds my country's Why is this week sentencing of those 2 terms 2 guys called Peter Hunter and David Smith Why is the prosecution so important. Good afternoon good afternoon. This is a in a very very important case and has actually been widely described as a landmark case and I think that's a very accurate description because this sends out a very very clear message that people like Peter Hunter and Barry Smith who engage in the activities of buying huge quantities of tickets from primary markets and then reselling them on 2nd or platforms on in doing so conceal the identities of the tickets to conceal the identities of the purchasers of the tickets or as as in the case you've described sell tickets that they don't own is fraud and that's what they've been convicted of you've heard here that we were able to buy tickets that the Tao didn't I mean that is exactly one of the charges that these people hunch and Smith were convicted of how serious is this with I go go well the sentencing and the convictions that we secured sends out a clear message that the activities of speculative selling Auspex selling as it's been coined the phrase it's been coined is illegal it's fraud and this case sets that precedent so I think that message needs to be reinforced and I think there is clearly some further work to be done in relation to the 2nd resurfacing platforms and we engage closely with the competition of markets authority in that regard and there are also further ongoing cases that we are taking and I think it would be inappropriate for me to necessarily comment on the specifics of this particular case would it be fair of me to say this until now with this case sets a precedent that people doing this of been largely getting away with it. I think it's fair to say that for some time now people like contour and Smith have been engaged in activities that until this case was brought there was not legal clarity around whether or not they were doing anything wrong but this clearly says that this is fraud armed people who are engaged in these activities should take not from this the verdict in the sentencing there's been 100 down how much damage do you think that this ticket online has done to the public we believe is done significant damage it's difficult to quantify the exact financial harm that results from this but we know that thousands tens of thousands of tickets for for many high profile events bought and sold each year by just by this activity and clearly that the ruling of the court accepted that this type of activity did to distort the ticketing market and so this sends a clear message that it must stop my countries from the national trading standards equine team thank you for coming here. Celebrity endorsements can be great for business but sometimes they backfire hash tag boycott York City has taken off on Twitter since the chancellor she tsunami posted a picture himself making a cup or over the weekend now he's a Yorkshire m.p. And he was standing alongside a giant pack of York City afterwards the tea company posted this asking people to try to be kind so it's been a rough weekend on Friday the chancellor shared a photo of r.t. Politicians do that sometimes Jeremy Cormorant did it in 2017 we weren't asked or involved and we said so the same day lots of people got angry with this all the same. We spent the last 3 days answering furious accusations and boycott calls but it's been lovely to see the others speak up for us we're so grateful to everyone who's done that in a civil way and gutted to see some use it as a reason for more nastiness but for anyone about to vent their rage online even to a company please remember there's a human on the other end of it and try to be kind. So why people getting so upset or is it just a storm in a teacup sorry I didn't write that well here's what Jonathan k.b. Say's about it he's a brown psychologist your shitty is supposed to be like the tea for every man rather than a politician who has one belief or another belief it's supposed to be ubiquitous and I think that's what annoyed people when it comes to a politician aligning themselves with it now in today's world anyone who does get annoyed they will instantly go on to Twitter and of vent their rage and so they are raging about their cup of tea it's interesting that people are suggesting that it's time now to take your spoons up in arms and actually start boycotting this brand but I think that all that magically says to do is put more attention on to the brand hence you and I are talking about it now I can think of lots of examples where you get brands tainted by politicians the one that comes to mind is sausage gate with ball is where he was promoting a brand of sausages by posing with the sausages people got annoyed because a lot of the workers came from Eastern Europe and at the time they felt that he wasn't you know supporting them sufficiently so that sausage became a bit of a bang in his hand. John Brown psychologist as you write at the start is anybody famous ever put you off buying stuff and Rich's email to say all celebrity chefs who put their names and pictures on packaging of food put him off he just says he objects to paying extra for that you're listening to you and us Radio 4 is consumer pregnant 28 minutes 2 are now people who use prepayment meters will still be able to buy top ups of only a pound British Gas has increased the minimum is how to increase this minimum spend to 5 pounds they did that in January but they backed down customers that complained and they did organize petitions and they were. Port for them from M.P.'s Rachel Gregory's from the charity Christians Against Poverty it supports people struggling to pay their bills Rachel British Gas came on you and us back in January and they told us that only 3 percent of people with card meters top them up by the minimum payment of a pound and then they only do it very occasionally in British Gus wanted to raise the minimum spend to a fiver to cut down on their own administration costs why do you think that change their mind now. I think that there's been a realisation that while it might be through numbers and the days people 5 pounds can be every unachievable amount and across the hay this is not a small problem for the people we help that Christians against poverty we find about half a day's coming through our door really really find energy costs and affordable and having to make impossible choices daily about whether they and heat their homes or Buy Theater and say and a few pounds either way can make all the difference but ingenue there are also big problems with the card me to pay points British gusted given the contract for providing these pay points and for running them to a new company some of the pay points were moved to were taken out and some of them didn't work British Gusev told us that now all of these pay points affixed and they say that if customers tell them there is a shortage of paper points where they live they will look to sorting that out is knowing where to go now to top up your gas and electricity cars is that still a problem for the people that you help. It's definitely a problem and in some areas we recently conducted some research about thousands of people that were helping and in some areas more than others at the thing and pay points and needs your house and open comedian times is a challenge and more than in other areas and I think it's an important reminder that as and the energy industry is rolling out smart me to switch more digitally enabled and can be topped up online or 3 mobile apps for many people talking up in shops remains and perhaps that preference or even their only option and so it's really important that that net is maintains an appropriate level you mention research that you have published today with a 1000 people that you have helped with that with those bills fit into that. For the research we've done is looking at and how low income families find and buying the energy that they need for the very very basics and such as cooking and lighting in their homes and we found that for many it's not anything that is just simply on the foldable and and they're struggling with things I put in the washing machine or or having a shower we and spoke to people that we've met who are relying on street lighting shining in through the window at night because they can't have the electricity on or have spent 5 years not using the heating and hot water and it's a really depressing way to live to have those very basics just simply out of your reach and we find so sometimes with the research for another charity today that says that low income families are a more likely to be paying more for their and edgy because they're on these expensive tariffs is there anything that can be done to help with those. In recent years and the government has put in place in price caps and that benefit people on prepayment metres and which make sure with their fair price compared to other deals and but we still find that affording energy is a really big challenge because there is not enough financial assistance to make sure and that the costs that someone has to pay and is in line with their ability to meet these costs to someone like you to go through the outgoings with them. Is that what you mean not enough support no we find there and this is not simply at budgeting is she. Talking about households who are rushing the ice is very very financial support I understand yes not enough not just simply not enough income. To meet their all the essential costs we have to pay and household and interestingly with Love and Theft on switching and your energy bill to the best tariff and the big game thermate from seeing that sometimes maybe up to $300.00 pounds a year in our research we found that people that had flitch were equally worried about the cost of the energy bills and the thing that they had were having Cheveley and because they couldn't afford it because it is not enough of a protective factor Rachel Gregory thank you very much hospital patients and care home residents are being put at risk because recommendations by coroners aren't being acted on you and yours has been given exclusive access to new research which says that lessons from avoidable deaths aren't being learned and mistakes are being repeated Helen used the chief executive of the charity patient safety learning once a new national body to be created to oversee the coroner's warnings and she's just written about that to the chief coroner when people are unintentionally killed by unsafe care we need to prevent that from happening it must be prevented we're not going to be able to do that as well as we need to if we're not sharing the learning that comes out of investigations or coroner's report it's so important that there is a coordinated oversight body that will be able to take that learning and to share it out more broadly without that we're destined to continue the mistakes of the past and that's tragic that's how the news from the patient safety learning charity or disability reports or Carolyn a concern to tell us about the new research that's been given to us she's in our radio car she's outside the Queens nursing institution central London Carolyn Yes well the institute has helped fund some of this academic new research into whether lessons are being learned. From what are called prevention of future deaths reports or p.f.d. They are issued by coroners after an inquest when they fear that a similar death could happen again unless action is taken to prevent it now in a moment we're going to be speaking to Dr Sarah Ryan who is warning that mistakes made when her son Connor Sparrowhawk who died in 2013 are still happening 7 years later but 1st Professor Allison Larry from London Southbank University has done this research professor Larry you've looked at a 1000 of these reports from 2016 to 29000 and you came up with a number of themes that you say repeat and repeat talk us through those the Yes We found a number of things the 1st even the most obvious thing is really around the scale of the work force so we're seeing coroners commenting on the fact that there's a deficit in skill levels so for example where care is being delivered but not by skilled people some examples of this are things like the administration of insulin people with already very low blood sugar with blood sugars been measured but the insulin still been administered or the vital signs were observations of some people call them which are. Routinely recorded in areas like care homes and hospitals and in the community but they're not acted upon So that's one of the predominant themes so it's around data being collected but not being acted on I mean you come across examples and I've been looking at the data as well for example an overnight Ward had 19 admissions and discharges and only 4 staff only 2 of whom were nurses somebody died there because their observations weren't done that's correct yes so another one of the things that we that's coming out of this is resourcing So having not just the right level of skill but the right level of staff and that's a very good example of a clinical decision you know or a an acute admissions unit where there's a very high turnover of patients and that's akin to something like air traffic control trying to land all the. Throat at the same time it's an unmanageable workload and introduced a huge amount of risk and Dr Sarah and your 18 year old son Connor Sparrowhawk he had an epileptic seizure and he drowned in a bath at an n.h.s. Assessment and treatment unit when staff reduce their observations of of him the carnot the time said his death was preventable What do you make of these findings in this research do you think any lessons of being and no I found out early shameful I think when we went into Conner's inquest 2 years after he died we were told that getting a prevention of future death report was the big That was the Holy Grail in order to give the trust a sharp rap across the knuckles to make sure that she acted and that and we found since then that these reports are just an interaction between the coroner and the trust or the place for so whatever the public sector body is no oversight of any of these findings is know much in the dots as linking the patents Alison's doing this research you know of her own but because she's she she's concerned about it and I think it's utterly shameful that these reports just sit on a website that nobody knows about nobody seems to look at and do you think that specific things that happened to Connor are still happening here we know they are listening to said this morning when we met but there was a similar death a couple of years later exactly the same pieces in place I mean. Death was so totally preventable it actually makes for quite sick thinking that is still happening but the the wider pitch that Alison is discovering in this research is utterly shameful it's over and over and over again and it's disrespectful it Shorty practice and these people have lost their lives their families have had their lives shattered and with we're just getting carelessness and dismissal we have obviously approached a lot of the organizations to whom the coroner's right and the Sikh you see in the Department of Health have not been able to come back to us so far but caring and are making the point that until staffing staff adult social care crisis is addressed and that staff a trained better and better rewarded. They they say that that is part of the reason and also n.h.s. England are saying that there is a meeting where these these reports are discussed by n.h.s. England and they also point to the fact that medical examiners are going to be introduced very shortly across across England to to look at desks and try and learn lessons so really there are other methods of making sure things improve on there as well as the coroner's reports they're absolutely other methods and I think the medical exam is particularly very welcome of course the only couple hospitals and a lot of the deaths that occur in the permittivity deaths occur in the care home sector in the community mental health settings and other settings such as railways place or 14 different categories and I think there needs to be some oversight to learn from all of these they are an amazing resource in terms of learning for patient safety the safety of people receiving care generally and I think a failure to learn from there is really you know each one of these reports as you go through them it's very obvious that this is somebody sorrow and for us not to learn from them I think it's actually not very good at all. There are a couple of exceptional ones as well and in one case the coroner actually commended a care home when a patient from the acute sector have been sent home very unwell in the care home acted very quickly unfortunately when able to save the person's life but there is skill and knowledge in the care home sector and I think that the quote from Kay u.k. Is absolutely spot on we need to probably that workforce and develop it the organizations all have the opportunity to respond and they have to respond within $56.00 days so why is that in itself not you know becoming part of the solution I think it's fine to look at the responses and we feel it's about 100 of the responses and they generally seem to have the same sort format to them there's an acknowledgement of the issue and sometimes there's an address to process so for example the introduction of a new policy but quite often when you actually look at the full coroner's report there was a policy in existence already it just wasn't implemented so what we've. I think I think it would be really good to see some actual learning from this in a in a in a much more rounded why and Dr Ryan you're calling for this body this oversight body the coroner the coroner's themselves and the chief coroner has told us that he can't change any of the actual sort of legislation at the moment the Ministry of Justice is responsible for that and they told us there is no provision in the legislation for the chief coroner to oversee or in force the implementation of any of these recommendations and they say because they're the judiciary it wouldn't be appropriate for the chief corner to actually comment on whether he thinks the law should change your in a position where you can call for change yourself and why do you think an oversight body would actually achieve any more than all the other sort of protocols and form filling that already exist that they work Alison's doing is already showing that a bit of scrutiny can actually find really important and powerful findings in these are being looked at at the moment of Qusay should be scrutinized is imo a sort of almost lost Look words having this discussion because it's so ludicrous we have a body of reports that nobody's drawing any it is doing any analysis around what is being found and they should be the findings should be known to trust other than the trust where the patient died that the learning potential is for all the trust or the care providers or the public sector bodies and somebody needs to do that work and has worked both of us academics I mean this is just this is so basic it's as basic as the failings were being reported within these reports is a circularity here that is so outrageous because it's so easily rectified Ok Dr Sarah Ryan and Professor Allison Larry thank you both very much indeed it was kind of concerned reporting live from London families who've lost loved ones to gambling addiction at Westminster today some of them arriving on foot they've walked a 100 miles to get there stopping off on the way at 6 football clubs that have gambling firms as their shirts sponsors the charity. Gambling with lives is organized this lobby of parliament it wants mandatory safety testing on gambling products and the kind of health warnings that you get on cigarettes is rich she and her husband Charles set up the charity after their son Jack took his own life he was 24 they say he died because of a failure by the authorities in the u.k. To protect people from gambling harm I spoke to Charles and his Richie this morning and this Tell me about his son he was a very very happy extroverted very popular and successful child and young man and he was very normal and he certainly didn't have any underlying traumas or or difficulties why did he take his own life was he in a lot of dead no it's not about the money he wasn't in a lot of debt you know it was a couple of 1000 pounds which of course we could have paid off for him it's about how a real addiction affects your mental health that you feel you would never be able to live your life where you will be able to control what you do you feel controlled by something else so what do you believe that happened to Jack Well we know that he started gambling going into the bookies to play on The Fix dot betting terminals with a big group of his friends while he was school they were in the 6th form so it was under-age and they were gambling with their dinner money and sometimes they had they had their sandwiches and sometimes they didn't I think the point about it was that it was extremely normalized and that when they went into the bookies they didn't know whether they were taking the equivalent of heroin or kind of it's you know that's the point and that's what gambling with lives is calling for that we need to know we need proper public health information about the different products so they're full of the different products have to be safety tested before they come onto the market you know in a child. Gambling with lives tell me what your calling for today how could what you call gambling products be tested before people use them. There's already a very substantial literature on what makes games addictive and the key things are things like speed of play frequency of betting losses disguised as when steak sizes etc The addiction rates on the fab to use those studs betting terminals indeed where they reduce the maximum bet 2 pounds a year ago that was the 1st time there was an admission by government that there was a product which was too dangerous to be on the market in its current form now you've got exactly the same products online with with no restrictions you've got sports in game betting coming along which is basically you know a continuous permanent gambling experience these are products which we know are addictive and therefore they need to be restricted and new products need to be measured against new guidelines the body set up to speak for the gambling companies the betting and Gaming Council told us that they have for example and banned advertising whistle to whistle during televised football games and they say they're drafting a new code for product game design and they say they'll make sure the safest products are designed for apps online games and gaming machines and that this code will be underpinned by testing the effect of these products on what they call consumer behavior what do you think. I'm sorry to say that at the moment this is all words if we look at what the industry has done it has only ever been prompted to do anything by pressure from either legislators like the 2 pounds or campaigners the only thing that the industry has done so far off their own bat is the whistle to whistle you know firsthand the impact the loss of your son has had on your own family what sort of reception did the families get when they called in at the football clubs it's mix to be honest some of the clubs in Gauge very fully I think Queen's Park reign. Jizz and full I'm totally welcoming and I think that they as clubs see the responsibility that they have got for for their fans young football fans or those most at risk of developing gambling disorder football. Has got a very unhealthy relationship with gambling at the moment and many clubs seem to depend on that income but there are clubs like Tranmere Rovers Luton Town who have made a very very vocal and positive stance of saying this needs to change and I think that will happen with some of the clubs that we've been visiting that was Charles and Liz Ritchie speaking to me this morning it's been a terrible winter for flooding and it's not over yet the official government forecast for the rest of this week a warning of flooding imbued leak in Worcestershire this afternoon flooding along parts of other parts of the river 7 this week and along the rivers including the use the Trent and the y. Groundwater flooding is expected over parts of the South of England for at least the next 5 days the head of the Environment Agency said James Bevan says we should resist building new homes on flood plains if at all possible we also have to accept that while we can protect most people most of the time we can't protect everyone all the time and that's why we need to think about making places more resilient to the flooding that will occur in future and part of that is making sure that as far as possible we don't build on the flood plain I think we have to be realistic most of the country is a flood plain Most of our towns and cities are built on flood plains the population is increasing and we are going to need houses for those people a new development so we're not saying and I don't think it would be realistic to say that there should be no building whatsoever on the flood plain we are saying the clue is in the name it's called a flood plain and therefore there should only be development on the flood plain when there is no realistic alternative and if there is development that is going to take place on the floodplain we need to ensure that it doesn't enhance anyone else's flood risk and we need to make sure that that development those houses those businesses are designed and built in ways that are resilient to the flooding that may well. But it was some of the people flooded out to come to get insurance they're the ones who live in homes built after 2008 now they're excluded from a scheme that's called Flood really that was set up by the government and the insurers to help the think tank bright blue says 70000 homes have been built on land at the highest risk of flooding in England after this close of Point 2008 and that includes $20000.00 homes that are not protected by flood barriers the director of the think tank Ryan Shorthouse says if flood really isn't extended to include houses built after the cut off date lots of people will suffer financially well Official figures show that one in 10 of all new properties since 2013 have been built in what the Environment Agency calls only 3 high risk flood areas the purpose of flattery and the cutoff date being 2008 was to disincentive eyes behaviors such as building or flood risk areas but obviously since one in 10 new properties have been built in flood risk areas that cutoff date hasn't really been effective in the future may see flood ghettos where we have areas which whole groups of property do not have insurance and therefore they become basically flood ghettos where small businesses don't move into those areas people don't have flood insurance. Basically people can't sell their homes run short House or the thing turned bright blue so should the flood really be extended to include people that have bought these new homes built in high risk areas that are unprotected now Omeri Dano is chief executive of the Know Your flood risk campaign her home soon flew to 3 times and she's now one of flood Reis advisory panels She's in our studio in Worcester Mary what's it like there. It's very very flooded the main city bridge has been fully closed to traffic and I have driven through what. I can only describe as surreal scenes of water worlds to get here via a very long convoluted road at the studio is is surrounded by water and the only way we can get in is by coming down a very steep path from the road behind as well thank you so much for making the effort for us we've heard that from Ryan Shorthouse with a think tank now he thinks the flood recover should just be extended to include all these properties that were built after the cutoff date you know after 2008 what do you think I couldn't disagree more really. That is somebody that has been flooded herself but flood 3 was set up and we had an agreement with the Association of British Insurers prior to flood 3 that building would not be insured that with new build that was built on the flood plain and the idea behind this was to not to incentivize development in the flood plain the flood plain as we've heard from same subject James is there for a reason it's the place a river goes when it's full it's the rivers 2nd home and building on in a flood plain is building houses to flood so I think if we give these people insurance or just encourage the builders to build more Oh absolutely without question that they have to go through a quite a difficult process to get planning application but I feel if that was eased up and people knew they could get flood insurance then that difficult process would be pardon the pun watered down somewhat so the people who might find themselves in future in these flood ghettos have both these new homes that they're not going to be able to ensure they're probably not going to be able to sell they may end up being mortgage victims is it just their bad luck. I'm very very sorry that this has happened and yes in a play I just wish that they they had their eyes open before they bought it but there are other solutions to this one of them of course is that they could shop around for I would be more in short expensive insurance but you can with a much bigger excess again which you can. Get insurance for through something to show your success ensure access but also to think about making their homes flooded resilient so if they do flood and you can do that in 2 ways one by trying to keep the water out with a cut to mop products and be adapting the homes to allow them to flood to recover more quickly Government Association why councils have allowed building in flood plain areas now they said councils only allow new homes to be billed if they have been told that flood defenses are in place now they say the money for flood defenses that is spent on them should be devolved I simply mean to councils and they say that the government should take more from the building companies for flood defenses and that they should also change building regulations so that new homes are better protected from floods Do you agree with that I couldn't agree more we have been lobbying long and hard for a long time to get the minutes at the Ministry of Housing to update the building regulations to allow housing is that are built to be flood resilient However I do feel the developers also have the ear of the government and they want to build houses at the cheap and put them up quickly and factoring in flood we see an adaptation would cost more to build to marry don't have to be there because we're running out of time and we did talk to the House Builders Federation they told us there's a shortage of land and they say they're already meeting strict rules that a supply the Environment Agency and the govern themselves say local authorities have a responsibility to assess the number of homes their communities need our planning policy is clear housing should be located in the areas of least risky. Flooding they say we're development is in a risk area and it's absolutely necessary appropriate measures must be taken to make sure that homes are safe resilient and protected from flooding that's it for today I asked you at the start for your the celebrities have put you off stuff you had loads and loads of ounces Tom tweets this Tony Blair and George Bush Bush bonding over Colgate toothpaste put me off that for life thanks for listening today . B.b.c. Radio 4 let's go to the latest on the weather with Susan power a very good afternoon tea more rain is in the forecast unfortunately particularly for the end of the week Friday into Saturday as a risk of 50 millimeters quite widely across the u.k. That's a couple of inches of rain so for those in flood affected areas unfortunately there are more challenging conditions to come but if you can cast your mind back to this time last year our Betty remember I had lunch yesterday and it was 21.2 degrees in Q gardens on the 26th of February will miss February day on record today it's much chillier and as we look at our full cost of overnight tonight and into tomorrow we're talking about a significant risk of snow for the softening it's quite a straightforward story out there it's chilly there's a lot of sunshine for the majority scattered showers across England and Wales will clear this afternoon whereas showers will become heavier I think across Northern Ireland and Scotland still some heavy showers to come to the north and west of the country with snow above around a 100 meters across the lower levels where some of the showers 10 heavier a chilly day across the board factor in the breeze and across northern Britain it feels close to freezing about 45 degrees to the south and then through this evening and overnight more snow showers to come for Scotland Northern Ireland and Northern England the risk of ice here for 1st thing on Thursday though the South a challenging forecast for us as an area of low pressure heads into the southwest of the u.k. And bumps into the cold air at the moment it looks like the m 4 is a rough cut off line where we'll see the snow north of the m 4 across the hills and mountains of Wales into the consulate and the Chiltons could be a covering of snow up to 2 inches the 1st thing on Thursday and then through the course of the day morning as that low pulls up towards the continent a difficult mixture of rain sleet and snow across the Midlands East Anglia in the Hiram counties for the morning rush hour by the time we get into Thursday afternoon things will become much clearer there wants again as that low pulls away but a chance of some disruption tomorrow morning. Susan thank you on f.m. On longwave on digital radio and on b.b.c. Sounds this is b.b.c. Radio 4. Hello and welcome to the world at one with me Sarah Montague the World Health Organization says the sudden rise in coronaviruses virus cases outside China is deeply concerning the health commissioner appeals for calm this is.

Radio-program , Association-football-midfielders , Nuts-1-statistical-regions-of-the-united-kingdom , Nursing , English-footballers , Medical-terminology , Island-countries , Northern-europe , Risk , Types-of-insurance , Nuts-2-statistical-regions-of-the-united-kingdom , English-football-managers

BBC Radio 4 LW-20200205-090000

Ces advised all Britons in mainland China to leave if they can the latest figures from the Chinese authorities show a big leap in the number of infections in the past 24 hours from 1000 and a half 1000 to more than 24000 the health secretary Matt Hancock said the British government was taking the necessary precautions we want to take a science led approach the approach that we been taken is very much been driven by the advice of the chief medical officer and this is a very serious virus and having a very serious impact in China as you say there's 2 cases only here and in the u.k. But we do expect more and so we're taking no chances Mr Hancock said a man who fell ill on a plane returning to the u.k. From earlier this week had tested negative for the virus and the chief executive of the Hong Kong based airline Cathay Pacific is asking 27000 members of staff to take 3 weeks of unpaid leave because of the coronavirus yesterday it announced plans to cut about 90 percent of its flights to mainland China. President Trump has made his final State of the Union address before next the next presidential election to a deeply divided Congress Mr Trump snubbed the Democrat House Speaker Nancy Pelosi refusing to shake her hand afterwards she ripped up his speech on camera and described it as a manifesto of mistruths partial results of the 1st vote to choose the Democratic nominee for president are in peak beauty Gedge and Bernie Sanders are in the lead with just over 70 percent of the Iowa caucus votes counted and an investigation into is under way into how a gun was reportedly left in a toilet on a transatlantic flight by a bodyguard to the former prime minister David Cameron the Metropolitan Police says an officer has been removed from operational duty b.b.c. News. Good morning now on Radio 4 it's time for a further leg of William Wordsworth life journey to mark the 250th anniversary of the great poets birth professor Professor Jonathan Bate the author of a new biography has been following in his footsteps today he goes to France at the time of the French Revolution with Simon Russell Beale as Wordsworth's he is with Episode 2 in Wordsworth's footsteps. In a very early morning in a beautiful July day in edgier to the poet William Wordsworth and his sister Dorothy stored on Westminster Bridge earth has not anything to show more for. Dull would he be of soul who could pass by a sight so touching in its majesty. This city now did like a garment where the beauty of the morning silent bath ships towers dome there to his temples lie open under the fields and the sky all bright and glittering in the smokeless and. Never did sun more beautifully steep in his 1st spend Valley rock or hill and there saw I never felt a calm so deep. The river glided that his own sweet will. To God. The fairy houses seem asleep. And all that mighty hot is lying still. Was. Put in words with the sister Dorothy were on Westminster Bridge that somebody too because they were only to frogs that come south from the Lake District that was that. They were travelling to the Channel coast this trip with Dorothy was going to involve a key meeting but it wasn't Wordsworth's 1st time in frogs just over a decade earlier when he was still an undergraduate at Cambridge University he'd gone on a summer walking tour with close college friend Robert Jones It's kind of the 18th century equivalent of 2 students taking an interest in their summer vacation. Which was in Jones decided they were going to move all 3 frogs down to Switzerland cross the Alps around the Italian lakes back up the rivers of Germany huge undertaking all of foot. And they arrived in Calif they found themselves literally walking into a resolution. It was the 14th of July 17th 90 the exact 1st anniversary of the storming of the Bastille could have been the beginning of the French Revolution the overthrow of the old regime the beginning of the tip of a new form of politics a new way of ordering society liberty equality for eternity. And over little towns they passed through as they walked south from college they bumped into people celebrating the fact to laugh at ASIO feast of the Federation the origin of the Bastille Day that is still celebrated today and for us it was an incredibly exciting time for these 2 young students they really felt that the world was being made and knew they were part of it. Bliss was it in that to want to be a life was worth it right and to be young was very heavy. It's a moment ever incredible happiness amazing euphoria and incredible excitement and at the same time an amazing feeling of togetherness despite the fact that there are already cracks showing in any kind of unified front there's still a moment of we are in this together and we have done something amazing. On the return trip a decade later what's with recapture the feeling of joy at that time addressing it to his college friend Robert chance Jones went from calories southward you and I traveled on foot together then this way which I'm pacing now was like the main with festivals of newborn liberty. The homeless sound of joy it was in the sky the antiquated earth as one might say beats like the heart of man songs garlands playing the banners and happy faces far and I. And now. Soul register that these things were too solid to recreating so my heard good morrow citizen. A hollow word as if a dead man spake it. Yet despair I feel not. Happy am I as a bird. Fair seasons yet will come. And hopes as fact. Wordsworth remained close friends with Robert Jones for the rest of his time at Cambridge he went to stay with him at his home in Snowdonia and they walked in the mountains together but then they graduated and like a lot of students Wordsworth just didn't know what to do he stayed in London for a while and then he decided to return to France to improve. Language maybe get a job as a tutor he went down to Brighton and while he was waiting for the tide to turn to the wind to change he stayed with a poet Smith she was very successful writer whose work he greatly admire but she was also very connected to politically radical circles in front of us and she gave words with letters of introduction to various figures. It must have been incredibly exciting for the young words arriving here in Paris in those heady early days of the revolution. I think the 1st place that he went would have been whites who tell . I come to try to find a spot of it it's a little passageway in the 2nd better on the small of the passage he pretty packed just behind the polling Royale close to Volusia it's changed a lot now but you can still imagine the English and American radicals visitors to Paris wanted to get a piece of the revolution they congregated here and they talked politics. One of the letters of introduction that Wordsworth had from Charles Smith once to another poet called Helen Mariah Williams she was also a sort of journalist reporter of sending news back to England of the progress of the revolution. The politics of those early years in frogs in the seventy's ninety's were really complicated lived Hunt is an expert when it comes to Paris towards the end of $1791.00 she's caught up in a circle of people who have similar ideas both the English and the French about the abolition of slavery about the possibility and the greatness of the possibility of a Republic and he's arriving at the very moment when the fate of the French monarchy is most up in the air the king has tried to flee. There's growing sentiment that the monarchy is going to have to be abolished but there's a norm. Division about this so he's in the midst of the most consequential discussions between not just English radicals and their French counterparts but a whole international coterie of people are people from Germany from Italy and there are South Americans they're all meeting together not as an organized group but they have these personal contacts the way Wordsworth does with his letters of introduction and they're exchanging these incredibly exciting ideas but in a moment and a place where these ideas have serious practical consequences will there be a king will there be an uprising what is going to happen to those who support a republic will they be arrested it's an amazing moment of division but also of hope and expectation and aspiration about what the future might bring openness and exercise of hope and. Great with lives which then stood upon our side we who was strong in. Bliss was it in the tone to be alive. But to be. Was very few. Times in which the state for bidding ways of custom Institute to could once the attraction of a country in romance. When reason seemed the most to assert her rights when most intent on making of a self a prime in chanter to assist the work which then was going forwards in her name. Not favored spots alone. But the whole of. The beauty war of promise. Wordsworth only stayed in Paris a couple of weeks he was told that Helen nor I were him so I'd gone south to the city of all male. So he followed her. The following months were a time of incredible joy young Wordsworth's life to be young was very have a he was free was full of hope because of the revolution and he fell in love for the 1st time. She was a young woman a couple of years older than him cold and value on a relative of the family he was lodging with. He taught her English and they would walk together by the river having a passionate affair. By the summer she was pregnant but there was no prospect of them getting married she was Catholic he was Protestant He was English and English was on the brink of war with revolutionary France and he was penniless he realized that he'd have to return to Paris indeed to London in order to earn some money to send to his pregnant girlfriend. It was also a time of in a conflict for words where the heart of the young lover was with Arnett but his revolutionary head was elsewhere because another friend had made him a law that was a soldier and they Michel beaupré who is a passionate advocate of the revolution and that Stanley were royalists but no pre educated Wordsworth in the revolutionary values of liberty equality fraternity sympathy for the poor so one day be walking with his lover by the law and the next he'd be talking radical politics with. On one memorable occasion they were walking through a country lane and saw a hungry guy Wordsworth wrote vividly about this in his autobiographical poem The prelude. And when we chanced one day to meet a hunger bitten girl. Who crept along fitting her languid self into a heifers motion by a cord tied to her arm and picking us from the lane at sustenance while the girl with her 2 hands was busy knitting in a heartless mood of solitude and at the sight my friend in agitation said Tis against that which we are fighting I with him believed devoutly the despair it was abroad which could not be withstood that poverty at least like this would in a little time be found no more all institutes were ever blotted out that legalized exclusion empty pomp abolished sense or state and cruel power whether by edict of the one or few and finally a sum of the crown of all should see the people having a strong hand in making their own laws whence better days to mankind. When Wordsworth left pregnant and yet in the early autumn of 79 to 2 he returned to Paris and he found it was a very different place from the previous year now the city was in turmoil. The King and the royal family had been held prisoner in the palace of the 2 leaders and in August it had been stormed by a mob the Swiss guard who protected the all family was slaughtered and Wordsworth arrived walked across the plaster carousel and saw the blood stains on the ground. A few weeks later there was a mass of Paris to crack the September massacre. Wordsworth was horrified Alice he had welcomed the revolution Bliss was it in that dawn to be alive and now he felt in some sense implicate. These were thoughts that he had seen a through a sleepless night in his home town with an extinguished paper I kept watch reading it intervals fair gone by pressed on me almost like a fear to come I thought of those September massacres divided for me by little month and felt and touch them a substantial dread the rest was conjured up from tragic fictions and mournful calendars of true history remembrances and diminishment and in such way I wrought upon myself until I seem to hear of voice that cry to the whole city sleep nomo. This comments of a common mind from which I could not gather for security but at the best it seemed a place of fear I'm fit for the repose of night defenseless as a woodland Tigers Rose. In the morning after that sleepless night Wordsworth right round the corner from his hotel to the gardens of the political. The still here today it's a very calm sea manicured trees fountain children playing people walking about dogs it wasn't like that in Wordsworth's time that this was the place where everybody gathered to hear the latest news there were vendors and hawkers and as he walked through the crowds he had someone saying denunciation of the crimes of Maximillian robes. He probably bought the newspaper and what he would have discovered was that one of the leading figures in the general down faction of the moderates that he was close to had denounced robes here in the National Assembly So this was the time when the revolution was splitting apart into different factions all the English in Paris at the time are now beginning to be very worried about what is happening because they see the people they most identify with. Going to the. Being executed by their fellow Republicans what can this mean that Republicans are killing fellow Republicans eventually there will be very few protections for those who are accused and people are being executed sometimes in batches of people in Paris it's very striking because everyone knows where the execution spot is and there are crowds watching people back to the king in January 793 the Queen in October 793 that people who are on the wrong side of developments in the national convention anybody who can be defined as an enemy of the country is in danger not just a prison but death by this very public method. So there's an atmosphere of fear of suspicion. Of division about what is going to happen in France. So the Jacobin extremists met by a taking a vote on the hands with friends being punched clearly it was dangerous for him to stay in Paris is such a time so he headed back to England did he left for the birth of his daughter named Caroline. Astonishingly the following. Risk he seems to have returned to Paris at the height of the terror. Before he was at one end of the 3 league office witnessing the blood on the grass. And after the slaughter of the Swiss God at the other end of the tweet is the huge square now called the plaster la Concorde it's a heart of Paris it's now full of buses and pedestrians taxis bustling heart of the city and Wordsworth return to Paris and 793 is very different place is to find buildings over to my right but with that in Wordsworth's day you can see them in original engravings of the guilty ones now a posh hotel owned by the Saudis the other a government administrative building and it's in front of that but Wordsworth stood and saw the blade form on the neck of his friend Antoine Dawson. A journalist key figure in the German town faction. To have witnessed the execution of that man to be the shattering experience and after that Wordsworth completely lost faith in the revolution lost faith in political revolution and he turned instead to be idea of a kind of in a revolution a revolution of the self and of the feelings achieved through poetry he still cared about the poor and the dispossessed but no he was going to create sympathy for them through his poetry. He wouldn't return to France for another decade because Paris has always been a place of revolution straight ahead of me here in the past that I see visions and he's a weather delay showed were rioting not so long ago and to my left just across the se is the site of there's a venerable of 1968 when the students of the Sorbonne took to the streets and in the hideous atmosphere tried to launch another revolution. Over the brac like Wordsworth was brought up in the Lake District then went to university and soon after that he found himself coming to Paris in an atmosphere of revolutionary fervor not unlike what words with a. Experience nearly 200 years earlier I think what he did was to soak him in a feeling of what was right and rule in a way feeling of the boys his must be heard I think he got that out of Paris and it was a very complicated time print there was no it with the illegitimate child but yeah but he what he seems captures so perfectly in there the French Revolution section of produce this extraordinary contrast of feelings on the one hand Bliss was that dawn to be alive but to be young was very heaven but on the other hand he sees the revolution turning to violence he would he walks across the plaster like our saw just after the September massacres where the bodies have been piled up and and then some of his friends and give it to you I mean this you know has has been extraordinary sect I guess on the other hand I would hold to what he's getting out of it he's getting out of it is the value of many voices the value of unheard forces me to guess terror like anyone would in like this country did on the whole very much Hotel against the the idea of terror and that plays a part but I see I think the 1st impression there's a strong go on that comes through what he kept his back with him is the force of human nature disregarded human nature insisting on having its a voice is good and empathy with them and that's part of his political conviction or in life and not line in. Hungry Girl walking down the lane with a starving cow it is this is against which we are fighting because if there is one yes for sure but and he's always picking that sort of thing yes and he said absolutely right here is that he gets his They're fighting so he's on to it this is the revolution. You do hear the great human lament in letter to you here this kind of. Majestic sadness the award winning contemporary I saw as well. But in a way there's something so muscular about his sadness that it does I think. Give a kind of optimism about human voice and human language it's not to me at any rate it doesn't feel broken in the way that later writers feel that they they write from a kind of injured point of view whereas Wordsworth feels vigorously walking the healthy and even though he expresses unease about the project or the French Revolution and often despairs about the human the actual fabric of his voice is seamless You know he has these rolling metrical phrases that seem just in their sound to suggest optimism Bliss was it in that dawn to be alive. But to be done. It was very helpful. What about couldn't go back to France for many years the terror had taken hold and England was at war with France so he spent many years full of in a conflict he loved his native country but he also wanted to stay true to those principles of liberty fraternity and equality and he was anxious about what would happen to Annette and little Caroline It wasn't until 18 o 2 that he could return at that point there was a brief suspension of hostilities the Soho piece of Emil so with Dorothy he was able to go back across the Channel to return to Cally where he would meet Annette and see his daughter Caroline now 9 for the 1st time. And it was as he was setting off on that journey that he and Dorothy stood on Westminster Bridge at dawn and he came up with the idea of that beautiful sonnet estate a whole month there wasn't much to do apart from walk on the sands or down to the end of the pier but it seems to have been a time of of great happiness in many ways callus hands haven't really changed there are no high rise apartments looking out over the sands but the beach itself is lovely fine yellow sand extends for miles and it does almost feel unchanged when I 1st arrived down here on the beach or a little cluster of people walking by the edge of the sea and they really could have been William and that Dorothy and little Caroline Dorothy wrote a beautiful account in her journal of this month on Callas sands. We walked by the seashore almost every evening with Annette and Caroline or William and I alone seen far off in the west coast of England like a cloud crested with Dover Castle which was but like the summit of a cloud the evening star in the glory of the sky nothing in romance was ever half so beautiful always dark behind one night though I shall never forget the day had been very hot and William and I walked alone together upon the pier. The sea was gloomy for there was a blackness over all the sky except when it was overspread with lightning which often reveal to us a distant vessel. Near us the waves roared and broke against the pier and as they broke and as they travelled towards us they were into fused with greenish fiery light. It was also beautiful on the calm hot night to see the little boats row out of the harbor with wings of fire and the sail boats with the fiery track which they cut as they went along and which closed up after them with 100000 sparkles bulls shooting and streams of glow worm night Caroline was delighted. So Dorothy wrote in her journal and William meanwhile wrote a series of sonnets looking across to the lights of England he wrote about his own country as a kind of stab of inspiration it was also here that he wrote that sonnet to his friend Robert Jones remembering his 1st time in France 12 years early. One of the reasons he was there keen to c.n.n. That was the talent that he was going to get married he decided to marry his childhood sweetheart Mary Hutchinson they had a long and happy marriage many children together but he never forgot about it and that he would continue to send her money and indeed some 20 years later with Mary and again Dorothy they came back to France and saw Caroline now a young woman. Through over turmoil of the revolution the horror of the guillotine and then the years of war when he was apart from his mother and his child what held fast to his belief in the restoring power of nature and his love of the innocence of children he captured those ideas so beautifully in one of the sonnets that he wrote here on Callas sands walking hand in hand with his little daughter Caroline he looks at the sky the sea the cliffs of death and he finds a kind of calm and in his child he sees a vision of what. It is a Beauty is evening calm and free the holy time is quiet as a nun breathless with adoration the broad sun is sinking down in its tranquility the gentleness of heaven is on the sea. Listen. The mighty being is awake with his attorney all motion make a sound like thunder everlastingly. To a child. Dear girl that was kissed with me here if thou appears to untouched by solemn thought my nature is not there for less divine. Eliason Abraham's bosom all the year and worship sed of the temples in a shrine God being with you. When we know it not. That was Simon Russell Beale as Wordsworth the presenter of in Wordsworth's steps is Professor Jonathan beat the music was specially composed by Emily Levy and Chris Laura Christie was Dorothy Wordsworth the series is produced by bt Lupin's now on Radio 4 rather 1st and fry are back with more of your curious cases and this 1st episode is pure gold. Welcome back to series of 15 of the curious cases of rather For am Friday where we are they your questions using the power of silence and Today's question is a real gem technically a precious metal whatever it was sent into curious cases at b.b.c. Top at u.k. By Paul Rudnick who asks How is gold made inside the Earth and why haven't we found a way to replicate the process could this be finally Hanna road to riches certainly not if thousands of years of trying is employed to go by because the quest to make gold has a long and very unfruitful history in the art of alchemy. 6 it all started with secrete him secretory him the secret of secrets a magical philosophy tech supposedly written by Ara stuff for himself. And parts down the ages by a radiance scholar. They enshrined these alchemic secrets in the Emerald Tablet a coded message describing how the heavens above influenced the earth down below. During the Middle Ages European alchemy pursued these ideas with fervor they decoded the tablet which claimed that the 7 known planets in space created 7 different metals on Saturn made lead and the sun produced gold achieving perfection became the aim of. I mean both spiritual and scientific from finding the elixir year of everlasting life to creating the perfect metal like gold according to material scientists marked with Nick Gold was seen to be a perfect form of matter it was not a pure form matter because it was made up of immutable laws a mixture of mercury and sulfur and people thought that copper was a different mixture of military and sulfur and lead with a different picture and I am with a different so basically it sort of made sense in everyone's head that if they were just different mixes if you could somehow change the mix you could get gold so what how did they attempt to do it there was this idea that something called the philosopher's stone almost we would think of it as a catalyst it would change one into the other and you needed to find the philosopher's stone in order to have the ability to change lead into gold so how did you make the Philosopher's Stone Well that was what we would call the occult It was all shade and mystery people coded their recipes and most of the arguments were like this very secretive right so there was this secret sauce of the stone that could help turn sulfur and mercury into other metals but why do you think they used those particular elements partly because the chemistry can do with those incredible motion in particular is a liquid metal at room temperature mysterious one for clearly special but it dissolves gold so you can take a piece of gold and they did and you can dissolve in Mercury now it just looks like mercury slightly yellow a verse in the Mercury you could do that backstage then you could come out front stage in front of a king for instance I can do alchemy and they could say prove it you heat up the Mercury the mercury evaporates you get left with a lump of gold Well that sounds like a calm trick I mean is it charlatans or is it scientists Very well then clearly they knew they weren't turning mercury into gold at that point but the people in the audience didn't know that of course there was a huge wealth at stake here in fact it was an act of parliament prohibiting the attempt to change lead into gold because the Crown was so why they would undervalued the wealth of the nation so welcome it's just trying to make a quick buck by tricking people into thinking that may go there well not all of them they definitely were a bunch of con artists I recall puffers and they turn these kind of tricks. To make money but there was a very much more serious scientific side so Isaac Newton actually translated the Emerald Tablet and he wrote more on alchemy during his life than pretty much any other subject earnest rather 3rd a relation he's no relation of mine proudly called himself an alchemist as indeed did Robert Boyle who was in fact instrumental in repealing the act of parliament the one that Mark mentioned just then which banned alchemies from attempting to make gold Ok but we now know those ideas are impossible right but Newton was in a puffa I mean did these ideas have some use yes absolutely alchemy was basically the foundation of chemistry and science experimentation as a whole because what they did what Newton did was systematic it was recordable it was repeatable and wrong very wrong Ok But getting back this is a question if you can't make gold without Committee we're going to need to look a little bit further afield so I put poor relics question to our curious cosmologist and you Ponson or and the question that we had to end was how is gold maiden's idea when I'm going to disappoint you because it is not made inside the earth where is it made then it was made before the Earth formed or the whole solar system formed and it's part of the sort of grand cosmic process that we call nucleosynthesis basically building lots of different elements from the Roar building blocks that the universe was born with told me through it is it Ok building blocks sure how does that give you gold gold is just one type of atom and atoms are made out of smaller constituents called protons and neutrons so if you want to make an atom of a particular type like gold in fact all you need to do is get the right number of protons in the right number of neutrons and put them together in a small enough space and that gives you the nucleus for your goals atom but the way you're describing it sounds like it's quite deliberate but this is something that happens automatically Yes. It's something that happens automatically in space and when the universe is born. Only very simple particles like the individual protons in the individual neutrons so what you have to do is find suitable places in space where you can bring those protons neutrons together and kind of ram them together actually really hot so they kind of fuse into that individual gold atom yet but it needs to be somewhere buried whole very energetic and very massive that Graham Newton I meant to star Ok right well who better to take us inside the life of the stars than the solar scientists Lucy Green within the cools of stars like our sun you have really extreme conditions really high temperature and really high pressure is because of all the mass of the stop pushing down on the center and in that environment were able to have a process take place that's cooled nuclear fusion so literally the nuclei of different elements coming together to build into heavier elements in the most simple scenario even able to 10 hydrogen into helium and create a new chemical element and you start the process of having stellar factories that can create the chemical elements that ultimately we know today. In fact our own star the Sun is any of the stars of this journey fusing hydrogen into helium with the really useful byproduct sunlight which is allowed life on earth to flourish. Just like plants and creatures staus own life cycle from birth to death. Stars very much a 3 evolutionary phase is. Born and they live and they die think about the hydrogen fuel inside the star as being limited and once that fuel runs out the fusion process then has nothing to work on. The star is able to collapse in on itself a bit because it doesn't have the energy and the heat to sort of keep it popped out . That collapse of the core of a star actually increases the density and increases the temperature and then something really interesting can happen. Within that hotter environment you can start to build helium into the next set of heavier chemical elements like carbon and oxygen and say inside the most massive stars you can end up building chemical elements through the periodic table up until the element ion and the interior of the star ends up being like an onion ion at the center and then shells of successively lighter elements as you go out say giants that are new is there is that always a right well comes from the concept of the cosmic soup because you could say that some stars are like shallow because they're little and they only contain a few lighter elements Where's all the massive stars like giant Spanish onions with lots and lots of layers rice into the heavier elements in the middle then you might be stretching this analogy a little bit too far as I'm but Lucy of course you mention that these stars make all of the elements up to I correct that's the giant Spanish onion again needs the turkey run ins but of course gold is heavier than iron as we know from the Periodic Table Yes So to recap if we're trying to discover how gold is made we've established that it's not made by alchemy it's not made inside the Earth it's not made in the core of stars or even in the center of onions disappointing and in fact the origin of all of the gold on Earth is even more brilliant according to someone who really does know there are 2 and 2 points that it was made most likely either in the death throes of a dying star or possibly in the collision of 2 neutron star said. Basically it's made in very exotic places in space there are a couple of plausible ways you can do it one is wait for a really massive star to reach the very end of its life it runs out of all the fuel that it could use for regular nuclear fusion and then it kind of explodes out in a final burst of fusion generating all sorts of heavy elements including probably gold and another thing that you can do is merge 2 neutron stars neutron stars they're not like regular stars at all they've actually already come to the end of their regular life and collapsed in on themselves and go to extremely dense almost to the point that they create a black hole but just at the last moment the whole process of collapsing star stops and you are left with what is effectively a sort of star sized nucleus just a giant bunch of neutrons if you then throw 2 of these neutron stars at each other and believe it or not this does actually happen out in space then that process is so cataclysmic that you end up with all sorts of new elements being manufactured very very quickly and that certainly would include gold and that actually happened Yaz there in 2017 when gravitational waves were discovered from this humongous collision of 2 superdense neutron stars a series those gravitational waves were spotted astronomers all around the world they pointed their massive telescope to the source and lo and behold they saw infrared light that was characteristic of gold with a little bit of platinum thrown in just a bring up a little bit more right so there's that in deep space and it's a long way from Earth so how does it end up on Earth Well of course the planets form from the dust and debris that's just floating around in space and that's going to include bits of exploded stars so in a way those alchemy where ice stars do produce go. Old Just you need a very very big star that is much bigger than our sun and it has to occur lapse into a neutron star 1st now on previous curious cases we've heard that you can create new elements right here on Earth using particle accelerators So I asked material science is Mammadov why we can't just bypass all of this ridiculous exploding star business and just make gold ourselves like proper alchemy Yes but with 21st century tech we can and people have done it the Soviets did it in any correct as they found the lead was turning into gold in some of the reactors because of the nuclear reactions occurring inside essentially people have done it in other more controlled conditions around the world so it's done it's just that it's really expensive it's much more expensive than mining and also what you get left with is a whole load of radioactive waste which contaminates the gold that you might then be trying to sell or give someone as a gold ring for your lot yeah radioactive gold rings not where a man take it you've got a gold tooth you I have. It is pretty special to think that actually there in your mouth or maybe if you've got a wedding ring you're actually carrying around a bit of exploded neutron star Yeah I mean and gold remains the most culturally valued metal even though it's not the most expensive and I definitely love having a gold tooth listeners' is at the back it's not like proper gangs to bring going on and I just think the fact that gold is very unreactive so lost through centuries so this gold in my mouth was not just its journey from the star to Earth but it's his journey within history and civilisation because we value this material so much. So Dr rather better when it comes to how gold is made on earth can we say Case Solved Yes Dr Freud we care it isn't easy created in a process called nucleosynthesis 1st new elements are formed inside stars but that only goes from helium all the way up to ion and heavier metals need an extra injection of energy exploding supernovae or colliding neutron stars forward heavy Elam. If I could go to that pulling on your finger is the product of a cosmic megger explosion millions of years ago. The Curious Case of brotherhood and Fry was presented by Adam rather furred and when a fry and produce spine Michel Martin Someone told me you know the camera can always tell when you're lying was acting about except lying paramedics help give your life the talents of a writer Alec Baldwin hit podcast comes to b.b.c. Radio 4 extra morning good morning. I can't sing to save my life I almost sang on with guests including Michael Douglas and beginning with Jerry Seinfeld of a Dr I am a comedian but I can't I just don't see the need for it to go to guy for it we had a guy for that here's the thing on b.b.c. Radio 4 extra tomorrow morning at 11 and again in the evening at 9 over on 198 longwave in d a b. Digital radio we have the daily surface led by cannon on Easter Good morning this wake off to celebrating the presentation of Christ in the temple and candle mass on Sunday and then putting away the very last of our Christmas decorations with thinking about how we can respond to called Slav how house small Kona can be to lease top with the twinkling lights of Christ some friend sent me a Christmas card that said in this song of the angels he steeled when the star in the sky has gone when the Kings and the princes a home when the shepherds a back with their flocks the work of Christmas is on to find the lost to heal the broken to feed the hungry to rebuild the nations to bring peace among peoples to make music in the heart. Brig directed by Ali Hamilton sings with Mary the Mother of Jesus tell out myself. Did God in these some times doll Dr use of wing to give us halts that jump for joy with the good news of your love and saving grace and enable us to share that joy around us Amen. Now I know that throughout its life the church has been responsible for some shameful and terrible things and all too often people of faith don't seem to have done anything that told to stop the evil and degradation that they saw in plain sight all around them bought if I had a pound for all the times that people have said to me well it's religion that's cause most of the wars of this world you know that's what I have done to church and I'd have to have money to give to all the good work that the church has done and still does our hospitals schools and universities all started by religious soldiers back in the days when nobody else still to poll particularly for poll people later it was her Christian faith that inspired dying Cicely So when does to develop the hospice movement which does so much Malva list work for people with life limiting illness and their families. There's a charity one of many in the slum don't borrow where I live that was set up by local churches nearly 50 years ago members of the congregations had living experience of the problems cold by poverty racism and unemployment and they decided to get together to do what they could to make a difference thanks to that inspiration thousands of people have been trained and helped to find jobs hundreds of homeless people have been housed in accommodation with extra assistance said that they might grow to independence keris have found help and advice to enable them to continue their vital work and countless refugees have been fed clothed and supported towards legitimate and productive lives with the practical support these days and many other faith groups in the Bara paid staff and volunteers care for people who would otherwise sleep on the streets and feed families in our food banks and that pattern of caring in big and small ways is replicated throughout the country it's not unusual for the people we serve and others to ask us why we do this work and I always say the 1st is what the Bible tells us to do over and over again as in these verses from some 58 he gave laws to the people of Israel and commandments to the descendants of Jacob he instructed our ancestors to teach his laws to that children so that the next generation might learn them and in turn should tell Batchelder. In this way they will also put their trust in God and not forget what he has done but always a Bay His commandments they will not be like that I'm stressed as a rebellious and disobedient people whose trusting God was never firm and who did not remain faithful to him but also people who do this sort of work get such a last ounce of it we meet interesting people who enrich our lives and of course we discover how near we are to needing help vulnerability comes to us all at some time in our lives. And now a hymn the praise for old God does for us this is Amazing Grace. My. My. But. She. Did go out the spread of the coronavirus. Many We pray for those working hog to stop the spread of the virus load in you'll mussy hear our prayer. Oh God we often fail we come to control the horrible things going on around us though we know they're breaking your haunt while we practice can't he mold them pray if we're on our own help us to see where we might be able to join without as a makeup positive difference the old in yo man say here out prayer Well Jesus sometimes it's called to love in your name some of the people around us especially those who are sitting hungry and angry we can fail I should try to be better behaved help us to remember but then but you'll Grice weak and helpless to see you'll face Inez load to say his prayer. Holy Spirit has inspired so much generosity open our eyes to all the people and organizations who work tirelessly and imaginatively to make this place suitable for all your children load a new all must say. A prayer. And together we pray as Jesus taught us our Father who art in heaven hallowed be thy name thy kingdom come thy will be done On earth as it is in heaven give us this day our daily bread and forgive us our trespasses as we forgive those who trespass against us and lead us not into temptation but deliver us from evil for the line is the kingdom the power and the glory for ever and ever amen now the daily thing as saying oh God beyond all praising to that magnificent Keen thanks did. A a. Day Thing to the. Be of good courage hold fast to that which is good render to no one evil furry Ville strengthen the faint hearted support the way you can help the afflicted and honor everyone love and serve the Lord with joy and the blessing of God Almighty Father sound and Holy Spirit be with you today and the way man. B.b.c. News at 10 o'clock the government says people returning from China should go into isolation and monitor themselves for any symptoms of the coronavirus it's organizing one final flight from harm the city at the center of the outbreak and advising all Britons to leave the country around 100 people are now in corn teen in a hospital in the world in the seas off Japan 10 passengers on a cruise ship have been diagnosed with the virus testing of the rest of those on board is continuing the British Tourist David Abel is aboard the Diamond Princess and says he was due to return to England yesterday we had a flight booked with on Tuesday morning that has had to be counseled.

Radio-program , English-anglicans , French-revolution , Nuclear-physics , Jewish-american-writers , Christian-theology , Judeo-christian-topics , Commanders-of-the-order-british-empire , Chemistry , Chemical-elements , Concepts-in-physics , Christian-mystics

BBC Radio Merseyside-20200131-110000

And we're all prepares to welcome more than 80 people who were flying back to the u.k. From the Chinese city of New han an accommodation block is being set up as a quarantine center Our reporter Mark Jr is outside the hospital for us this morning Mark what's the situation there at the moment. Well Phil the situation is the hospital appears to be running smoothly certainly the the carpet sort of job for all the patients are coming and going all there has to be said there is no sign of any notice or statement maybe to reassure or to tell people what is happening the hospital speaking to some people outside some patients one woman who is due to give birth or in March told me she is worried another man said he's quite proud that the facilities here are apart and in the region are being used now the man said he was a little worried but he feels everything's under control but he would like his information now we understand the trust which ones are open world University Teaching Hospital will be putting something on their website shortly but we have heard from the World Council of the part of it he says also is that the hospital running as usual including emergency services patients are unplanned surgery stuff working in the hospital will not be in contact with these u.k. Citizens and he says the compassionately we understand this is a stressful time for the people on the flight but also their families after a long journey we welcome them to a bar of interest they will be comfortable during their time here Ok thanks Mark that's our reporter Mark outside arrow Park Hospital and we'll have more on this in our news programs throughout the day elsewhere almost 50 years after logical and economic ties with the European Union will be broken tonight as the u.k. Officially leaves the organization very little will change straight away during the 11 months transition period but there's pressure on both sides to get a trade deal by the end of the year Justin Welby is the Archbishop of Canterbury and former Bishop of Liverpool he's calling for unity for our future to work we must make it work together we must be united in a common vision for our country however great our differences on achieving it a common hope for what we want to happen and what we want to do in the years to come so joyful or sad let's hold our heads up high proud for the future look upwards and we'll never walk alone. Rollout of smart motorways has been put on hold until a safety review is complete it includes a 10 mile section of work being done on the m $62.00 between Warrington and Manchester and sports and Helens begin the defense of their Super League title tonight when they take on sulphides the team they beat in last season's grand final is the 1st competitive game for new coach Christian Wolf is taken over from Justin Holbrook Wolf says the challenge now will be to stay ahead of the chasing pack competition as a whole is going to improve and a per improvements we all think if you have a look at the recruitment acquires a or problems have done. Their office are going to be coming after us and having us and there we need to make sure that we formalized side of that so it all brings a new challenge in a different trunk and Everson defender Lewis Gibson has signed a new contract before joining Fleetwood Town on loan the 19 year old signed a 2 and a half year deal and will be at the League One side for the rest of the season Meanwhile the former Everson youngster Anthony Robinson is set to join AC Milan in Italy for 10000000 pounds the 22 year old was with the Blues for 10 years but failed to make a 1st team appearance he joined we're going to let a last summer weather some heavy rain around the small in the chance of some brighter conditions this afternoon high temperatures today of 13 Celsius b.b.c. Radio News thank you very much Phil. Your Way to go to the show on style b.b.c. Radio Mississauga. Friday morning we love Fridays on the show I want to know what you don't want your 3 word we can put it into 3 words for me one of the last weeks and look we don't a feature on the walking without parkas. The lead the half hour love another crack an afternoon over the incest that tell me. That extra mile for you just lately will give them a mention on the show. You know. The The for. The to. Yes. He's playing. The same or. As applied to start with 15 lives each asked them a series of questions for every point they lose they lose the appropriate number the lives of one however falls below 3 that can be nominated by the poll number that kind of spots on that opponent is outs that he got one spot on join an open play he gets a life back that's the way it goes and John welcome back to day 5. A lot of states for a half early couldn't count yesterday could we well. You know. I don't count John a calculator but I get what they are due to case I certainly know if I'm to be trumpeted I'm talking to top of the other God I go shall I got a clean layer of what are you going to going to nearly yellow the phenolic stepped in yesterday's win in full faith. Like the Carter family back in the pocket got a few more nano Gary and I chill and I shall see ally now than you played before. Yeah yeah I can shine now I just got on my family man. I got I got bitten by a real good chance. With they are Veco break a chant I'm going with 21 Yeah well I mean. Why he was very good he was going to back for the guest appearance on The Rock a celebrity now he can entertain an old song out of and he doesn't take up the phone to us anymore last I moved into Graceland you know Elvis is older. Than the day when the way people. Went. Anyway I digress right John I'm going to give you the the on a whim and a chance say. Ok. Ok I was so I'm going to ask Gary 1st or 2nd mate. I'll let John but last. I knew too that you only French about mate yeah well other than the same turn I go a. Needling that. Ok let's play your numbers look. I'm going to start off so many of all John Challis. Says John. Marling are. 7377 John chalice you know Ok. I was about the. Most Ok Gary yeah I won't Sally Field to quote one or I. Don't. Know. A love story. Or is that going to Hollywood is my most. You know they are getting very 7873 she's not going to thank you nor. Your mama. Do worldview do well you know will really. Mind question and I think this of course is going on the toes it's tend to carry it's 11 to John right John Ok We're going to now ask you about the song and I want you to tell me the year that was number one in the u.k. Please Ok Dr Salah the Chula Clark well. Well I was going to 6561 John Well you know without irony as you 61 that's on the most occasions weddings and of this. I carry. The same question for you. Number one in the u.k. What year. In the summertime Mungo Jerry. Change 74970. 2 to lose in the my points here the big chunks I think they are close on the doors Hatch it's close it's 60 Gary is 70 John John Ok. Hey dude the Beatles number one what Yeah thank you 7068. Ok. Man and I nice he can top 5 but out there. He went with words let's just go no no no. But what you got a you know. Number one in the u.k. . The Carnival is over by the seekers. 66 who got you know 965. Well. Close game this one is a close game. Ok John Ok. Then I'm on the street where you live Victor mon. Sent yon moon pull up to the every 2. Spot on. Good dancer. Come to 6 Ok I. Could have a change attack and I'm going to ask you something that I'm going to say Yeah golly and you've got a child we want year that was all right Ok you know even when captain Bobby Moore is accused of stealing your bracelets. I know this is a big story this they had wasn't before the woman well Coppola asked that question and now. I look out for Bobby Moore was accused of stealing a bracelet. Hoping I win a Nigerian 65 I was your last 5. Are you exactly 5000 that it was to order in the 1970 will cause a lot of people reckon it was doomed to limp it was something that's one of the knock on the banks out them food poisoning. That was Sesno because he often doesn't play pizza but that's how he did Number 2 game copy by g.m. Only 3 to most of the game but you reckon that was a setup. It was Jordan the Wilco got to. Maybe take charge a lot p.h.o.r. And I said well he played well that was a good match he will well matched with John and so I love a few shout outs go on. To my gorgeous wife but to go says k.c. Cali 4 times faster grandchildren and all the people that wicked Psalms died at all thank you I never got any super lots of that you know to. Just wife which children be fantastic grandchildren and. I'm. The superdelegate diminished on the lot but it's one guy he thought I'd show Carlos Well the young guy. With the only we can't carry see this is what I like about you Joe when the show when the going gets tough the tough get you don't panic he lost big on a couple of you kept. You know you just got to turn take your time and I mean there's a lot of well you know you never raise and you think I'm going to be mowed. What it was embargo set in Colombia out of the island big story want to you know it was you know the members actually said it was also a conspiracy said it about that one absolutely. Because he was a gentleman the kind I want to play above the most was the class that issued this thing but what Michelle Keegan didn't know I wanted you know I have to be a. Lovely man by all accounts is well yeah well they were gentlemen in that and I feel it was diving all over the place and moaning about everything and I was like Well football is for all I like when you go in and all of a lad we would have to be in and young I'm at Inova chips on the well. Heeled going to school to just gotten jobs and chips now. I'll. Know when I know the abuse. I'm showing up to telly 2 pounds 28 g. Yeah. You get all the governments on them the cheese the gravy the lovely souls the pig plenty of vinegar that's all I want. I always say to my nieces and nephew that even when chips will fall. To Chivas and him I'm going to move them up I used to say can you afford it yeah well. I'm not talking really only money John you're making a sound only for you know what can you show your family did you always ask for the scraps No I never understood that people who wanted all the crispy bits on cheap it well you know we were appalled we were poor and yet remember the moment we should also a baker called Howard a little bit late nights and we used to get a penny by go broke in case you know all of it is to set up a penny about. Broken biscuits a big tins in the market square mountains and used to get my 20 pounds with the bro . Cleaned the corner of the coast the. Pink way for. Me dodgy with the jam lick time was just a Don't you know geometry we sound like when you sound like different creators all you do you sound like all of it tweaks and the other one we did not a blue ribbon we have a black and white ribbon and you have not got it now look at it now you know what I mean no no no thanks. I'm a host and I will come to know when the see you know what I mean what can you the stars you know. How you always are it's so you know take advantage of the end just give it you know give it the Ok you tell me after the kids today do one believe you lost your radio show got these days don't tell me if. I play a song now. I don't I'm. In the. Still has no. Business. Still. Young. And still. Young. As my. Chances. A. B.b.c. Radio and I seaside travel. Thanks very much Sean m. 56 very slight traffic g 2 an earlier x. In the happen at 10 For Stratton all lines have all lanes have reopened now but traffic still very slow as a result of watch out for that on the m $56.00 over on the world the a 41 year Chester Road in Heaton heavy traffic it's all because the traffic lights are out at the junction with the chimneys pub it's the Hitchen's crossroads of please do take a Chicago to those is of course causing delays where people take turns to cross the cross roads and middle of Ave in Liverpool so traffic there in both directions around the junction for Crompton's line it's because of road where they're doing junction improvements as lane restrictions in place and it's been slowing things down for much of this morning we'll keep you updated on those stories keep me updated if you cannot take me on that or anything else I want 517 on 4 anon 53. To main foster or Jimmy Foster show we like to sit down with some of the city's local unsung heroes battlefield was created to empower children we have classes focused on football we have classes focused on dance the actual well being of our children well about their actual mindset if I can achieve what I've achieved then they can't and I think everybody needs to so wind down the evening with me Jermaine Foster and some great guest to weekdays from 7 b.b.c. Radio Merseyside. Your Way to go but Sean style can be seen Radio Merseyside. Me a moment my mate who's lost 5 pounds of Slimming World awesome that's left to go on a good. Normally after party going to go round of applause from Africa. Well we give him a show on a I'm going to miss you only but he's gotten his course really slim and. I've given him a slide to pounce when I get to the bin go look a lot of luck and so much childhood slips going to. Your face like the smell of gas . Well done right is to the next 5 years. I take way this weekend my keep strong keep strong and don't you know forget the mantra little pleasures where big neck is. Always a moment on the lips 10 years on the hips and depressing is snake on the if you've got a lever Now what was your one and those who when told you bold what you mean is it is never said of phrases that they use it to not try to what do you say that you don't think about yoga the high priest asked gets at the front with the magazines influences in a basket we can bring goods it's like to have a festival you can bring goods lose the mountain showed great walked away with said basket it is class you bring healthy dogs and then it whether it was really well all the other little ruffle takes away the baskets there's a munch as well no carbs before. No carb before. Meaning Spain no calls for mops rarely but when I went to I want with my body about and from. March I was going to benefit. What Roger Clark. No we asked before Skegness go made one ocular well done Ray and they do a great job there with them and well they should come up with a man show that I think we do well we will yeah that could be a little talking point next week our own slimmest John Hattie Slim is still in but can use them will get sued Yeah you'll have to do something else now to make your Ok orphans Coldplay Come on up after this I've been working with our partners can see the movie you know it's sad. You know that is a walk with Tegan when. There was Dances With Wolves I'm numb sure those big it was not a huge documentary but I think it was a film it was called Walking with penguins this could be the sequel it could be strolling without park is just when you thought it was safe to go for a walk I'll pack is a back by the way you won't believe this more I've been telling people I've been kissin the wrong law wrong I'll patter I told of told people it was by me right yet Stephen snarly. Laughed Nady Dr did me right I'm it was about me I was in bar maybe you were lucky to. Get in the middle. Coldplay and all phones on b.b.c. Radio message are very good morning to you folks over your Friday morning is going well it's great to have you with us I'm certain you will till 12 noon and of course log with the phone and not just pop in and surely to tell us all about that's that it's Jenny lay there between Chili one for always a cracker listen with you and great music great guests Salty's on their back in the chair at a 4 o'clock till 6 o'clock Friday night spall between 6 and 7 and don't miss your main Foster is between 7 and 9 is on f.m. Ante a b. Is germane because 1900 hours yes indeed 7 o'clock tonight San rugby league Saints This is soul food. So I wear that's a group that's going to be a cracking game the Stones of course start of the defense of the title tonight 9 o'clock Linda Mack with Claire how Milton's amounts of calls and then the Late Late Show with the Kennedy from midnight to warm all here on your fave to station b.b.c. Radio Mazie site now sometimes on the show we get a call or text and we think that's interesting now we'll we'll find out what that's about well we've got one last week and I thought I'm going to follow this one got an email from a lot Steve you sent me 3 weird weekend shown on hottie Wark in his alpacas so it sends out. You know. Part of experiences when I was intrigued so be it was placed in the Find out on the window open parked is and straight away do you know why I was surrounded. 5 alpacas 5 boys. Being. The black one in July. Fred and Barney. Was a block as I had a head on a most pretty well behaved and that the brilliance of The Daily calm they loved they loved the interaction with people very calm you can just sit with them for hours she can walk them you can feed them. Commit them the experiences are really really got children with learning difficulties autism things like that do you really relate to them and really go to. You with an emotion industry fellow he is when you're 32 years a child you Alondra over and I got diagnosed with prostate cancer in 2016. I got the opportunity 3 years later to take the time it's you and I was looking to do something for their lady Simon says occupy me time so I originally just had them as pets and the garden and the in-laws house I just started off with so I've now ended up with 11 we've decided we're going to. Walk in experiences the more you let me get the fish I mean you know if if if if if but we yet. We go so go for pygmy goats at the same time so it was like having our own little patch of. Live in Chester Bay the thought in the cinema I mean it's not an obvious Kaliya path after which you macaws I mean shows a hobbyist often offer you love them as pets it was a hope you never knew but he else is involved with alpacas they said. Very unlikely you'll just stick with that show and a lot of these other places have ended up with a it seemed 40 I'm not sure if a lot but with that many people we've got 11 sofa and counting so we get an alpaca with you if you pick them up. Quite common now across the conceit this quite solid lead is about we are looking to preach from ourselves to increase the head next year and we've got 3 Celts as well so we'll look in separate the boys with the Celts and hopefully get his next year so you had them on you wish you in the motor trade didn't you yes I got them. 6 months before I was potentially going to reach it ended up it was just over 12 months when I retired so clearly time it's on hard to mimic on that all a spare time a half and used to just go and sit with them and in a so much it was fantastic. Just sitting with them in the 31 else is a job. It's only difference and everybody all the national. After the. After. The things that you. Wrote. Obviously. The crash when the crash with. That. She can fail. The products made from very expensive. Products available. I mean this is the polar opposite from what you are doing is not really a. Difference yeah. It's. You doing something that you love. Something and they. When I worked in a car basically never seen daylight for 12 hours a day. I just wanted to go out. To come down and maybe. No doubt only. One of the other reasons why. People want to. Just love the interaction with people and children. We have to go to Nash and homes weddings. At the Chesterfield people actually get married in the Chesterfield and american off the alpacas which you know on the grounds of. Method in your. Wedding venue. They approached me about. It because the trial different things people here and they thought. It's really starting to take off you can just come and spend time at the meet and greet them feed them or you can actually take them on a walk around the grounds of the pope. Out the back of the pope. How would you describe the miniature camels don't think they are related to the camels that the Dutch leave what's called a camel at. The fate of the camels very shaft on the on the shoulder very shaft on the ground so much stroke type of animal is a pretty small Yes it's slightly smaller than I. Actually used to carry packs and things. Become from Asia from Chile and Peru. Basically have them make clothes out of the wall. Like they're in a lot of. Jumpers out of the socks and things. The gorgeous animals. That we don't know about with the opposite of common Steve wife Mary the record company this is going to be this will be a shark. Interesting problem because these are actually made out of the our pockets for you know what we've got here is 2 small animals that would be made and it's called Needle felting that's actually got her the natural her and then you just break down the fibers it's it's knitted together with needles so it literally is just it's like a pinprick to. Be very very soft. Drink in canisters So when you open when I want to hold with the are part of the pope's open 7 days a week where it can pretty much 7 days a week it's subject to where I've been used between 11 and 5. Subject to how busy we actually are well it's in the best of luck fantastic great to see you both on the actual invite me along Ok thank you very much. Yes on the grounds amid the Chesterfield. The wedding venue was well it's a lovely set. And that's look right over my shoulder the astrally I'm there just to the back of the car park you'll see at the rock and roll in our pocket strips on. Afternoon I really did and they were definitely I wasn't joking with someone come over to give me a kiss well I got the wrong while I was saying it was Bonnie and it was Elliot's it was Elliot to come almost all like he say I got a kiss off yet object I will have a crack in time over that lovely people as well the traffic because of emergency repairs us at the junction at 10 full Stratton Apparently there are a barren barrier of has going on after an earlier accident to die so the acid or clay is for the hot to keep that line closed off while they carry out that repair what the a $41.00 new chest to take extra care at the traffic lights are out at the junction with the chimneys pulled. Cross right thing is quite busy while not it is causing heavy traffic while people take intends to cross so you just take action going to those will let you know when they happen switch back on of course Menlove that is slow in by starvations of it's been slow for most of this morning it's around the junction for Crompton's line this roadway sever improving the junction is slowing things down for you this morning I will find 1714 I'm not on a 53 Keep your updates coming and I will of course keep you updated throughout the day on b.b.c. Radio messy side Jenny someone said come all the way from the beautiful princess with. The east front is in with us in was it raised a musical household everybody played instruments from a young age yeah we all grew up in our family in particular it was mostly the fiddle he grew up going to you know Caylee's in learning to dance at the same time listen to all you know contemporary pop music and we wanted to blend the 2. I think over the 3 albums that we put out we kind of slowly transition into what we Indigenous tell me some as weekday afternoon from 2 on the d.c. Radio messy side. In the morning b.b.c. Radio. Account way for the match singer should report that I mean yes you should watching masks in a single it was more interesting than the other stuff yes at a show to put watching my son because no it's one of them programmes that grows on you from the outlook you think what's going on there's something strangely it gets it is sucks when does an ego got this is ridiculous and this is really weird and it's a little strange but then it's like a Stack Yes new self than a no and also the costumes are amazing the little create for people but it does make me laugh when they guessing who is not going Helen Mirren and you're just a bit like a dozen prop it needs to do that now or you know you know have you got your theories a few theories why are they come on well some of the panel for one of them is full at least yes and I Yes fact is she was good I think she's normal I don't think that maybe the Bumblebee is Nichelle of Opus from Girls Aloud I think people thought it was Charlotte Church that changed their minds so what's at stake and what's with. The things I was to talk them into that but what we do with. I don't go all out and it's his mansion living off his millions of pounds worth of royalties Now we know you mean the work at the moment this is going to be perfect for getting you out there again you dresses a baby now dummy argument after trying to assure you are. Hard sell to God and so mother I'll tell you. What you think. You know so we will be the ones who again for the laugh but yeah be one so you know who are you know doing Ok but maybe need a little base to their career on the world you just don't rule out Michael Bohl caustic most of these people can sing you can see up to piss gone a couple of them this can't. Know what they'll do I don't think so do you know who doesn't watch them all sing who loved to Phillips. You know. I thought I used people move I did take no vote just a want to see. Her But you know the octopus Yes What are you implying by that you need people like you come on and cost you nothing still it Dick I love that I mean still oh they reveal the so called Celebrity and nobody knows who the Teddy Sheringham Shelley said he's sharing and that will take all I would get. The girl last week. Upon a fight the singer really knows the name you obviously don't I did was it the to get loose and some milkshake Oh hell a piece she didn't want to see my milkshake brings all the boys to the yeah. Yeah it's better then yeah yeah right you know it's kind when you start you know. You have to anyway. Months one of them might be months of Danny Rugg you might after today well he's moved around I mean the man you don't know about party as if someone might him if he goes Yeah definitely you know right. Religionis smelly waters for lived in this mean f. You a life g.i. And now us fuel a genius. Does that mean secretive and slight. You know I don't know he said to Tom do you know of Tom I'll lend you 10 quid don't you telling or told everyone the pope Rebif religion this fall. Remains sooty I'm sorry over the insult for the union it doesn't mean the puppet that comes with it but is that so you get this. Salty. You know I'll only be half and I already was not that he gave me 5 hours came down for the genus. Lunch Oh is it funded us I was regarding to a storm. The lightning charm I think you may be in for a friendly genus 20 minutes here so that's one of them which one is it maybe it's secretive maybe it's sooty or maybe its own dearest lady to a strong. I'm to clue I would love city because it's ridiculous. Now it's one no brainer jewelry I'll go number one I'm going to 3 so hearty things that secretive and sly Yes Philip Eunice Yes I'm not you however thinks it's from the list when I was in a store that is now thin fund. What's that saying you're all going on the. Tell So tell me all. Salty it is no sort of feeling this is going to kill a thing I think is if you f l f u l. For the genius for the engineers don't like going for it flew Jim the engine with 1661 when all of the you had said I want to know yeah by the time he took the gas fired off and went back it was filling to the. But we've got journalist going to a little Who's this huge take calls however there are some 2 other stories going around which is going to get in the way a little bit one of course is the fact that we are getting paid to treat people who got who come from the place in China or the area of China where there's a problem so none of these people of a confirmed to have household but they've been evacuated from the place by the Anderson I mean I wouldn't call it courting park although if you absolutely can as I wrote Part one get out a statement about it the department they said good part of health department of health after statement about it because people are in unison saying should I go in tomorrow part of the nervous about it I mean I'm sure everything is going to be fine only it was like procedures that we put in place but it creates panic among people absolutely new because we have major organizations refused to speak you know I just tell people through the media through what's going on and reassure them absolutely that's what's needed is to let people who have you know relatives or Paul knows he was a car park and they might be think you know well that they going to be Ok but I need indeed one of our reporters mothers would say who rang up her daughter today to say you know people to this story don't go anywhere near a park you probably know would you get it by going to our of our. Mom was where people are worried yes and yet our great all sources are a park the national service the t.o.h. Public health they won't get any statement out there or even confirm it's happening it's always the way it's always a breakdown in simple communication they don't know what to do their pathetic and it creates panic and I think oh I mean I'm describing is how this creates a panic they need to stop it by making statements we're told them and they're stupid. Stupid if they will panic you don't say anything you know it's stupid. That's. You know I never make sense and everyone thought the breakfast was going to be the big story that we will be looking a little bit racist as well because one of the still effective bricks is well on there once you think so but anyhow he have a couple of hours and if there are enough calls he'll stay for the couple of hours a lot of e-mails because well you know with the come in already I've already taken a call from John and I wasn't even my job to take his place I would have done it not getting it for money for. Probably no I'm not going to treat. Yeah you need to pay have to take an act go to the pound you're there you. Know this is. Roger great show today on the since taking calls I'm talking about the big issues of the day of course I weigh 207-3193 double 3. Flown always in a accent you so much folks have been fabulous at some of the most on the stuff you're getting up to over the weekend and the Shawnees and them carried over by the way celebrity chore you didn't get it today so we will have another go at that when I'm on the if your team a plan for you over the weekend I hope to do the business whatever sport you're interested in Nice to have tea for being found thanks to Christine and all the team take care of yourself we'll see you Monday morning check this out to date. Me. It's 12 o'clock am on b.b.c. Radio mostly sad time for the news now as Phil Cooper Good afternoon 2 people from the same family have tested positive for Corona virus in England and being treated at a specialist center in Newcastle more than 200 people in China have died from the virus nearly 10000 have been infected it's health editor Hugh Pym says it's not yet clear whether the 2 confirmed cases in the u.k. a Link to han the city at the center of the outbreak there were about 1500 people who'd flown in from Holland into Heathrow over 2 weeks before last week and they've been trying to trace them they'd managed to ascertain that knowing 100 clear or had left the u.k. So they were still trying to trace 600 but we don't know whether the 2 cases are amongst those who flown in from. Or whether.

Radio-program , English-footballers , Traffic-law , Identifiers , Sociological-terminology , Social-events , Fashion-accessories , Radio-bbc-merseyside , Stream-only , Radio , Radioprograms ,

BBC Radio 5 Live-20200127-010000

The astray you know you can listen to this program by downloading the new b.b.c. Sounds out for music radio broadcasts and to make sure that you subscribe to the program so you don't miss the next episode. This is b.b.c. 5 live on the b.b.c. The use of drugs Thank you Daryn good morning tributes being paid to basketball legend Kobe Bryant who's died in a helicopter crash in California there were 9 people on board the aircraft when it came down in the city of Calabasas including the 41 year old's teenage daughter Giana Shawn Mandela's from the entertainment website she was of course a rising star and about not surprising getting her pedigree and her father was very encouraging of her career and there were apparently and groups to a vast spark out of me practice Bryant's regarded as one of basketball's greats winning 5 n.b.a. Championships during his 20 year career with the l.a. Lakers Shaquille O'Neal says there are no words to express the pain he's going through Daryl Williams who won an Olympic gold alongside Bryant as described him as the greatest competitor he's ever gone up against and played with Sekou Smith is a senior analyst for n.b.a. Dot com An n.b.a. T.v. . And position as the face of bullying in the polls Michael Jordan there he was the future of the league for years before Le Bron James came along and stepped into that space but for a lot of people call the is there touchstone player in their personal history with the n.b.a. Elsewhere the number of people who've died after contracting the new con coronavirus has risen to 80 with more than 2 and a half 1000 other infected across China health officials are warning that the disease can be passed on even before a sufferer shows any symptoms Larry Brilliant is from the organization ending pandemics if you're on an airplane and you don't even know you have the disease yet and you're in contact with lots of people in crowds and you are still a spreader or even a super shredder. We're still not certain how much that actually occurs we don't even know the actual Beijing period of this disease yet SARS was to 7 days this one looks like it's longer that police in Nottinghamshire questioning 3 men over the death of non-league football the children centers the Matlock town midfielder died after an attack in Retford in the early hours of Saturday 2 suspects have been arrested on suspicion of murder and a 3rd is being held on suspicion of g.b.h. a Former England football is calling for new rules to stop children heading the ball because she believes it led to her dementia 74 year old soon lope has won 22 caps and was the 1st British woman to pay a semi professionally abroad the f.a.a. Says there isn't enough evidence to change the rules and more than $200.00 Auschwitz survivors will gather at the site later to commemorate the 75th anniversary of the camp's liberation to Mark Holocaust Memorial Day The u.k. Government is pledging a 1000000 pounds to preserve the location for future generations that's the news on 5 live Sport now and we'll take you live to Melbourne 1st for the latest from the Australian Open tennis with the sun where 2800 finalist a 4th seed Smyrna Halep has a 4th set point against the 16th see Italy's Merton's of Belgium after 58 minutes play we've just gone past midday local time the last meeting was won by Merton's of Belgium but in Senate from Merton's and it is Helen who 50 minutes played 6 for the 1st set to get back into the final after losing out to Caroline Wozniacki in 28 we will have the quarter final line up completed by the end of today and a little later on tennis practiced over a sports section from 7 am We will have a commentary of the magic everybody wants to see and hear world number one Rafa Nadal gets your straightly and carry us now though here with the rest Today Sports nice. Liverpool boss you're going to love says he and his 1st team players will not be involved in their f.a. Cup 4th round replay again Shrewsbury as they will encroach into their winter break the League One side held the Premier League leaders to a 22 draw they were for. Under 20 three's manager Neil Critchley will take charge of the replay at Anfield and field mostly their youth players elsewhere Manchester United supporters again voiced their frustration with the club's owners and the executive vice chairman Ed Woodward the spike their team producing a 6 nil win in their 4th round tie trauma and England fastball I'm awkward says his new run up has lessened the pressure on his body and he wishes he made the alterations sooner Woods 5 wicket whole helped England into a dominant position against South Africa in the 4th Test of the wondrous The home side made an unlikely 466 runs to win this is b.b.c. Radio 5 Live on digital b.b.c. Sound it's small space and I'm not going to look at the weather brain will be slow to clear from southeast England overnight clear spells from any other areas Cherry rain moving in from the west later in the night falling asleep for snow in northern areas breezy and cold with spells of sunshine that's the story of the day for Monday showers spreading in from the southwest and they'll turn wintry in some places temperatures later reaching highs of between 5 and 9 degrees b.c. You find life Fridays from one on b.b.c. Radio 5 Joining me now is James Kim Jong Robbins for some top quality concepts why wouldn't they want chemistry I think that's what we offer I mean I would say when you're younger this is what it looks like we don't have any chemistry still so much chemistry and that's why you might give you a. Hands on 3 Madhur view the latest releases and come out of my old film review this week with the reviews of Richard Jewel and the last special guest is Willem Dafoe talking about the lighthouse fellas James and John Robbins and come out in May is film review Fridays from one pump b.b.c. Radio 5 Live. For our own 5 Love and Dalton added Bryant coming up in this of the program in a moment the death of the sporting superstrong the nickname the black member one of the youngest players ever to be drafted straight from school a 5 time n.b.a. Champion who find a. How America has come to terms with the loss of Boscobel icon Kobe Bryant in a helicopter crash will be in l.a. Later on to come of the Grammys the musical Oscars and no doubt it will be a much more sober affair this year do you remember in an hour's time we'll open up the phone lines and from Monday morning travel funny you can join us on of 808-590-9693 texters from now on 8558 or e-mail up for night at b.b.c. Dot because you Ok wedgie want to travel to 2020 that you've never been to before would you want to travel to the never been to before travel to some cool began to tell you how to get there and no doubt have some tips on what to do when you can and if you made the right choice is one among some of the things moments of silence have been observed at basketball matches across the u.s. In tribute to Kobe Bryant fall in the 5 time n.b.a. Champions death in a helicopter crash could be Brian was considered one of the all time greats of the sport he was 41 years old local police said he was one of 9 people on board the aircraft that was found on a hillside outside the town of Calabasas there were no survivors Calabasas in California and Earlier I spoke to Mike Tuck who's the captain of the Sheffield sharks and England international He gave his reaction to finding out about the death of the Boscobel legend I actually got a text message from one of my friends. Back in Canada about it. And I 1st it's just one of those things where you think now there's no way you know it's just one of those unbelievable things and. You're like you're you know the 1st thing I text back I said all your lying. And then obviously I got on Twitter and then you know googled it and all the reports started flying and so it's. It's quite a shock it's absolutely devastating to the bass more community and you know you talk about a guy named Kobe and like I said before it's just like he's one of those guys you kind of think he's just like Invincible and something like this could could never happens and he's just such an icon in the basketball worlds. And. Also you know as his daughter as well you know 13 years old on the holocaust there with them as well and and she was. Quite a budding basketball star herself we saw you know countless videos and photos of her on through Kobe's Instagram and Twitter accounts and stuff like that so it's just it's absolutely devastating news that that's going to really rock. Not only the Basle world but but the sports world and just the world in general is both people was something of a family business was new because his daughter would have been the 3rd generation as it were Yeah as Father professional player you know Koby grew up in Italy where his father had played professionally so you know Kobe had you know started playing a very young age and this there's all the different stories about him playing with going to practices and being on the court so just serious completely emerged in basketball from a from a very young age and it's no wonder that you know it it became his life and the game that he loved and why became so good at it you know he's just. You know he it calling themselves as the Black Mamba and there was always the mob mentality that he would bring to every game and he was just such a relentless competitor he was intense you know extremely dedicated worked on his craft and he was demanding you know from his self and from others but. All that thing you know came and gave him a fantastic career and something that you know we all it's up to I felt like. I remember him getting drafted he was one of the youngest players to ever be Jobs did in the 96 job which was a lot of legendary jobs in itself we kind of we kind of grew up with him we watched him grow up in the in the league and watched him develop and and you know he played 20 years with with with the Lakers teams are extremely loyal player with you know countless accolades you know 17 time All-Star 5 championships 2 times finals m.v.p. Or he's an n.b.a. M.v.p. 2 Olympic gold medals you know the list the list can just go on and on and but he was he was more than just a bottle player you know like I said he was an icon but. He you know even after he retired he got a Cademy award last year the year before for Ernie emitted animated short film as he was yet I was partners in a sack investment company so he really was he was doing you know you was more than basketball but he was basketball. He was he was part of the culture and a big part of that and you know his legacy will live on forever Yes And one of the greatest possible players will time 100 percent he's up there when when you talk about guys like you know Michael Jordan and Le Bron James and you know Kobe is right up there you know are arguably could could be at the top is just. Is one of the greatest and you know it's unbelievable how many people that he's inspired and how many people looked up to him and you know myself included like a reason I love watching him play. Last week was actually the 14 year anniversary of when he had his 81 point game against the trauma Raptors. And drafters fan saw I always remember that one that one's things things in the memory but you know is just it was it was it was the greatest. Definitely up there on the list of the best of all time I get why you mention Michael Jordan in that context because you know because he came along off to a Michael Jordan you know reached the peak of the 2 worlds in of his career but I wouldn't fool in terms of great yet Michael Jordan Wilt Chamberlain. I would almost vote Coby for his era not who will Chamberlain didn't seem like anybody could come and Ne Win him in a one point he seemed almost as if he would suppose Michael Jordan. Yeah. Definitely I mean he got a 5 chip Jordan 6 championships and Colby Gazza 5. And it was he was that guy he was that guy after Jordan you know after Jordan was caught it had reached its peak and then retires the 2nd time and then came back with the Reserves and he kind of passed the baton on Syria to Colby and Co You know won 3 championships wished you all Neil and you know I grew and then there was the argument Ok can you do a biopsy off and then the ends up getting 2 more by himself. And is this just a proven proven player and you know definitely up there on the all time Les. He was until yesterday he was 3rd on the all time n.b.a. Scoring list and then Le Bron James passed him yesterday so it's just somebody kind of coincidences of things that happen and it's this kind of almost like a fairy tale story that he had. What is a natural talent oh Diddy you know the skills that he had with those trained and practiced since rehearsed if you know I think he was known to be a gem rot and a relentless relentless general like showing up at the gym you know 6 am to 3 workouts a day just you know just constantly constantly working on his craft and I think a lot of it was modeled around Michael Jordan because I think that was a his huge inspiration when he was a kid growing up and you can kind of see the similarities and the likenesses and their games. But yeah he was known to be a relentless general and just very you know on the follicle with a in there every day very stress and just cause a costly working working and obviously that charge on through through with with his accolades and with you know how good of a player he was is and what it takes to be at the top of your game in Boscobel do you need also a lot of men to force you to. Yeah well I think yeah I think it's takes you know for one you've got to love the game if you don't love the game you know it's not going to be for you. And then for Syria you've got to be dedicated to your craft and I think those are 2 things that he definitely had but like I talked about before I think his biggest thing was the mom the mentality and that mentality he had where it was just intense and he was it was relentless and dedicated and you know coming back to my mind is you know when you would watch him play in some of those finals accounts isn't just the look on his face sometimes he was just using very good and yeah he was very German and he was known to you know he was demanding and he's expected a lot from his teammates and how we best remember him. Well I think like we've talked about before I think my my favorite memory of him would be that 81 game point performance you know. No one else has really done anything like that except since Wilt Chamberlain I don't 100 points way back and of how much earlier era but my favorite moment for him will be that 81 point for performance but then again his 2008. Is 2008 finals over the Celtics was was absolutely incredible and you know this is just countless others you know it's 5 time champ champion and 2 time finals m.v.p. So there's lots of there's lots of good memories that he's given us and those are the things that will live on in those are the things you know you have to think about the good times and all those moments they have us as much tug that Captain of the Sheffield shocks and an England international run and lays him be is a sportswriter who rode to bug a few of Kobe Bryant and is with us now Road and fans will have how did you 1st meet the brunch you remember. Oh yes he scored his 1st n.b.a. Basket in Charlotte North Carolina in an n.b.a. Game I was covering that game as a reporter and he came out of the locker room afterward and. Mediately hit me with a full shake you know him is full of excitement it was young just just a rookie just had made his 1st basket had no idea who I was I was just a guy with a microphone and no book but he was eager to greet the world he. And I got to know him real well I did I've done 2 books on him actually I did one called Mad game the n.b.a. Education of Kobe Bryant when he was young player and then I did a book that came out in 2016 which was a full biography of him so he would be 17 or 18 when you 1st met him. Right he was just turned 18 a few weeks earlier and what was he will visit Sid out about him as a youngster. In the game and everything but the book isn't listed Well the league he went into the n.b.a. Was very much a man's league today it's much younger as they draft younger and younger players it's all very special but if but I didas paid him a huge sum of money to turn pro it's parents' money and so he agreed to do that and Adidas arranged for him to be traded to the Los Angeles Lakers which is the glamour team of American pro basketball. I know. About the leg and he was in illustrious company there I imagine right but he was he actually went to Los Angeles is 17 turned 18 at all against and immediately broke his arm trying to play on the outdoor courts at Venice Beach because he was just so filled with enthusiasm Larry Drew was an assistant coach with the Lakers told me he's just like a puppy let out of a box but it was a very dangerous puppy he threatened a lot of the older veterans he played so hard he really didn't know how to play then so much but he had so much athleticism and. He just work so hard and he put so much pressure on them it was a very bad time for him but. He just kept telling me as I got to know him and I got to know him pretty well he kept saying I don't know how I'm going to make it but I know I am I'm just going to make it in his goal he wasn't shot he wanted to be the very best player in the game the greatest of all time possible sounds like a kid who lived and breathed it. Yes You know I had to speak to a youth group. Some years back and I'm I quoted him I asked one of the students what she did for a living it was a high school suit she said I work at the local grocery store back in groceries and I said Well Kobe would be the greatest grocery bagger of all he would walk in the door on the 1st day on the job and he would announce to all the workers in the grocery store that he was going to own the grocery store chain in 5 years and then he would set about figuring out more efficient ways to run the grocery store as an 18 year old and it would be absurd because he would put all this pressure on his older coworkers. And of course he wouldn't know how he was going to the grocery store but he knew he was going to 0 he was certain and I think again another time a few years back if we had been able to bottle his. Determination and spirit and. All of those qualities well as a culture we'd be selling condos on the mood right now because he was that kind of guy you must live and breathe when you go teenager you know old. Marriage you have a family what was he like to His How did he do from that. He said to competitive standard no one ever outworked him he was determined that would not happen and I'm I just thought about doing laps and all the stuff that all the jocks talk about he would be a place is 82 game schedule they're flying back and forth across the country people are a long sleep in the planes after the game and he's sitting up after having played a long minutes in a game and he has to watch before he'll sleep the entire for each other game everything that he did the opponent did and then he'll sit and watch everything that he has to review of the scouting tape on the next day's opponent and he just kept everybody around him off balance because he would not he refused to beat outworked. Well what do we need to know about Bryant to to understand. How 1st of all he was such a great basketball player but also the man behind the persona Well I look at the arc of his life he was the wonder child and he came along and in 2003 I was doing interviews like this because out of the blue I became from a great family he was clean cut he was charged with rape and he had made a series of mistakes in his life tremendous conflict with the people all around him lots of anger and. Just the kind of stuff that would have defeated anyone else the things that happened to him. But he had a will and quite often the greatest athletes I've encountered a very very select few have an iron will and he had the iron will to wreak cover from his mistakes I don't know maybe people athletes or not who could recall ever from the kind of very public mistakes he made but he did it he went on to lead the Lakers to a couple more championships after that I do remember very vividly that most uncomfortable moment when he was had to face the cameras off to an infidelity had to face the cameras with his wife right beside him and then write an infidelity is one thing but he had infuriated so many people with the rape charge. It was tough it was very tough and the things he did he got rid of his coach his shoe company is everybody involved is you know he foreshock Shaquille O'Neal out of Los Angeles they had won 3 straight championships to gather and then things fell apart it was a he was a very. He went from being strong willed to absolutely willful and self destructive there for a time really how just based on that one out in the nation today. Yes well just all the conflict and so much of this conflict came from his Bishan and. It. Didn't match up he went so far as to create a new purse though not in the wake of all of those mistakes he became the black mamba you know he took that from a quite an Terran Teano say all about this. With this idea of just being a killer should make of a competitor and that we're really was the standard he had wanted his entire life he got sidetracked but he found the strength to bring his life back to the center it was not easy the way you describe him ugh a sense that he there is a kind of rude Shakespearean tragic hero you know. Faded actually talking about as well this could be if if he had not had the will to come back yes he could. Well it's like the line from f. Scott Fitzgerald show me a hero and I'll show you a tragedy and there were elements of that for Koby Today we're speaking on the tragic day but when he left the game I will stress this when he left the game and 2016 and he scored 60 points which is an unbelievable number for his body was worn down he went out on a night scored 60 points. And left but when he did he left because without any doubt because a regret because no one not even Michael Jordan and I've written a 700 page book on Michael Jordan but there is no one who did everything possible and I mean he's shirk no duty he left no stone unturned he was. Completely obsessed now he was also a very talented young writer he had a huge recording contract when he was still a teenager he set aside his entire creative life. I was walking out of a forum in Los Angeles the old arena the Lakers used to play in and 9099 their season or just send it and I was walking out with him and I said What are you going to do this summer Koby he said basketball there is nothing else and he did he obviously found other things he got married he he found some personal life but there was this ability to lock in on what he wanted that was beyond the pale given that given that road and you don't think this is an old question but you probably understand it being right so was he a nice. Well I'll tell you that one of the profile began with another teammate calling him. Correct the asshole. With you know with more colorful language leading into that and Coby was was asked about that on national television at one point and he lapsed and. Yes he was it could be so upset as. His like Michael Jordan Michael could be with his teammates absolutely brutal. He. Puts a put so much pressure on them because he puts so much pressure on himself and Copia was much like that he put tremendous pressure on the people around him and he was not the leader in so many ways that that Michael could be. But Koby learned to lead. He learned those things some of the natural gifts that Michael at he did not have he had charisma. But not at the level that Michael Jordan possessed I will tell you this. He made millions of fans love him. Just with how hard he played and his unbending dedication to competing no one in American sport has ever exceeded. Thank you appreciate the road inlays in b. This moves right in the road the cup above the fizzy totus of Kobe Bryant and it's b.b.c. Correspondent in Washington David with his Good morning David good morning I think it's fair to say that America's not just within the bows Kebo world but Sydney schools world in general paps even beyond that even though Main Street America that they're mourning this morning. Oh very much so I mean in Los Angeles and there are lots of tributes being paid as you can imagine to this this hero of the sport of basketball but a man whose reputation transcended the game of basketball and you can just judge that from. The scope of the tributes the being paid by people on the field of politics and entertainment somebody said that he became one of the most beloved public figures in the city of Los Angeles and this is of course a city doesn't with quite a lot of public figures as citizens do you have any mood details about what actually happened. What we do know is that this was this helicopter crashed and then caught fire on a hillside near Calabasas which is about 20 miles from downtown Los Angeles quite a remote area. Piers to have started a brush fire and it took some time for officials to you know normally get to this quite remote area but to extinguish all the flames people have started or did start to gather actually at the crash site. When news broke of this disaster and I have to say that probably makes life for all the more difficult for the rescue teams have to you know try to comb through seal the everything comb through the wreckage as part of their investigation into what caused this crash to happen we know there were 9 people on board not of him survived including Broad's 13 year old daughter as well the authorities released any information on the other passengers. They have been remaining very tight lipped on. I must say at this time about the identities they haven't that they didn't at that press conference most recently even confirm Kirby Bryant's name. Mung those who have deceased but why is Barbara ports based on confirmations from other officials that are not going to be bribed his 13 year old daughter Giana known as Gigi was 2nd oldest had 4 daughters. Are among those who perished in this disaster there is talk about originally a talk of 5 people being involved and the one thing that came out of that news conference was that that passenger manifest actually extended to 9 names but they're not releasing details of who the other people are or who were on board to have any details of the kind of tributes being Perri by other sporting stars and stranded he's forward to shock you know new for example could barely do street arms salute. And we've heard from him we've heard from Magic Johnson we've heard from people from across the skier's sport that he transcended really from Barack Obama we've heard from President Trump and we've heard from Eric Garcetti who's the mare of Los Angeles who basically seemed to sum it all up when he said you know that he couldn't find the words to express the solar and regret that this city felt on the news that the loss of Kobe Bryant so real cross-section of tributes being paid and there will be a loss of a greeting going on in this city because. That area. Around the Staples Center which was Kobe Bryant's home. Stadium home of arena is of course largely blocked at the moment because of the Grammy Awards which are taking place there in a couple of hours time have just got underway in that very same building so. A lot of security in that area and perhaps denied the opportunity to mourn in the same numbers that they would like I would imagine at this time. David thank you very much appreciate it David Willis in Los Angeles is joining us correspondent. Peter Bowes later on very shortly to talk about the Grammys is what I imagine will be a somewhat somber of tonight more low drawbar 1st as government has 5 headlines as to of drugs and on digital b.b.c. Sounds. This is b.b.c. Radio 5 Live Thank you Don tributes are being paid as you've been hearing to the American Basketball legend Kobe Bryant who's been killed in a helicopter crash officials in California say 9 people were on the aircraft when it came down a burst into flames on Sunday morning sported the 41 year old's teenage daughter Giana is among the victims Byron Bryant played for the l.a. Lakers for 20 seasons he was a 5 time n.b.a. Champion 12 golds at the Olympics is from the same a Shaquille O'Neal says there are no words to express the pain he's going through Deron Williams has described as great as compared to that he's ever gone up against and played with us where the government says it's considering selling planes to bring home British citizens stuck in the region of China on lockdown because of the corona virus outbreak Officials there now say the new strain of virus is infectious before any symptoms are shown and can be a place as one of his officers has died in a crash on the m 6 the 47 year old's vehicle was the only one involved Carlisle yesterday afternoon 25 to 2 now let's get the sports news we'll take you to Melbourne 1st on this train Open Tennis is g g 7 where 2018 finalists a mile ahead of his closing in on a place back in the quarter finals in a return to world number 2 leading 16th seed at least by setting a break for 3 and a stark contrast to a top 50 minute back and forth 1st set the 2nd has been a little more lopsided Howlett did lead with a double break down. Does being cut in half how up though an important point serving at $43.30 all these buttons does get the break we're going to change if she's been voted one of the breakpoint she's had so far in this match is going to help ease. This month to be followed by Gilmore FISA gets Dominic team and then a little later in tennis breakfast on sports breakfast from 7 am We will have commentry off an 8th meeting between world number one Rafa Nadal Australian the curious that's to come a little less show our sports extra updates continue on 5 Live now though away from the tennis and his show Joe Sacco the rest of your day's sports news Liverpool manager Yogen club says he and his 1st choice players will not be involved in their f.a. Cup 4th round replay again Shrewsbury in the 1st week of February as it falls in their winter break under 20 three's a manager Neil Critchley will take charge as Liverpool again feel the team made up mostly of their youth players as they have previously done in the domestic Cup this season admits they played poorly at Shrewsbury storm many invitations for the. Stiff to win a game so. I don't think that we have enough time to. Tell all the things which are . Manchester United on the other hand this buys their League One opponents with consummate ease as 6 different scorers found the net in their 6 nil drubbing of Tramiel manager all are going to solve is happy to avoid any slip ups playing against the league want team pitches trying to level their levels out just thought the attitude was spot on that's all you can ask for when you have to do is right as a manager you can't fault them all today's football results are available through the b.b.c. Sport website and up England's cricketers remain well on course for a series win in South Africa after setting the hosts a huge 466 runs to win the 4th Test in Johannesburg Joe Root side were $248.00 all out on day 3 meaning they now have 2 whole days to take the 10 wickets which would seal a $31.00 series victory the captain shared a stand. 46 with some current I just have a bit of fun out there with Richie and yeah great position for guys I thought the guys played beautifully what he with 5 wickets this morning and what a great man and Everett the team's face one of the great guys in cricket and for him to come back from injury and get 5 phase amazing and obviously you guys are fifty's they're very serious played beautifully so a good position in New Zealand beat Jamaica to win net bowls Nations Cup in London England took bronze with a narrow 2 goal victory over South Africa England coach Jess Thirlby says there are plenty of positives to take from their performance of the tournament you know we know with their whereabouts in the 2nd place here that from the World Cup not here these plays here being very brave you know they put their hand up they want that name then they can pray state they dropped it would seem hands are they did finish shots you know and they shouldn't be and I don't want to be say I think the focus now is was that capacity for Grace in learning I'm not smite job to get the best out of them over the next company is the pharmaceutical world champion Neil Robertson whitewashed China's Joe you long 9 mil to win his 17th career ranking title at the European Masters in Austria that is your latest from b.b.c. Sport could push you to succeed. Piece of British championship you say. Across the b.b.c. This is b.b.c. Radio 5 Live on the b.b.c. Sounds. Right. Do you remember try will open up the phone lines for Monday morning travel phone and where would you like to go to 2020 that you haven't been before you questions for our travel guru about how to get there and what to do the as well you can text me from now on 85058 or email up all night the b.b.c. Dog. First let's find I was making the front page of the Frankfurter mind Zeitung with play could there correspondent here in the u.k. One of his leading. Stories unsurprisingly about the corona virus it seems the epidemic is expanding at a frightening pace so the number of deaths doubled in just one day from Saturday to Sunday on Sunday at lunch there were almost 60 confirmed deaths the number of infections has increased to much more than 2000 themes contagion doesn't work of the moment the rate of infection is increasing the Chinese president has called it a grave situation so far he's admitted they know too little about the virus and it seems that some of those infected they don't show symptoms such as fever of the sickness so the very hard to detect on Sunday the 1st case of coronaviruses were reported from Japan from the u.s. Also in France. Some Chinese cities are now kind of closing the gates there keeping kindergarden schools universities all closed to avoid more affection infections so effort that has a very long feature study from China correspondent any used. Tried to gather information what people think about it and there's a lot of fear on the ground there a lot of rumor of spreading by the Internet by the social network Some say the rate of infections is in reality much higher than what the government. Myths probably these rumors are exaggerated We don't think it is the death rate of 30 percent of something what was told and from statistics or. On the ground rumors but it is frightening and it might also have like a political impact if Mr see the government is not in control of the situation might be. Contribute to this content and it has a serious economic impact I mean because. Konami correspondent he reminds us that the SARS epidemic 17 years ago led to a decrease in Chinese g.d.p. Of 1.5 percent more than $100000000000.00 worth so it might have all kinds of very bad effects in terms of health in terms of political stability and for the Chinese economy and the world economy you know what is the impact of this epidemic so far. Obviously. The virus is spreading though there in the confirmed cases in Germany what are the kind of precautions the German authorities are taking to ensure that they protect the German people from that. So far as far as I'm aware there have been. Officially. Recognized cases in Germany but the forty's are on alarm they check at airports and they say they're in contact with other medical institutions to find out as much as possible about the fire s. And b. To be ready if it occurs and then of course people might they will go into court current pain and so on have. How does the newspaper not you cover the 75th anniversary of the liberation of the concentration camp Auschwitz how do you cover that. I met If I mention I was going to say Megyn is much more emotive for German readership it is it is like I would say is the dominant topic in the Monday edition of our newspaper if I counted correctly there are almost 10 articles a whole page is very long feature stories analysis lead article on the front page one story for instant is about a photographer was taken portrayed photographs of 75 hours with survivor of these pictures are very moving all people 8085 or 90 years old the pictures are in an exhibition in as an in West Germany at the moment our correspondent in Poland has spoken to the old lady who has survived the concentration camp been our legal editor has an analysis how and why it took quite long very long actually after the war to to get at least some of the main culprits of those responsible for the Auschwitz mass murders took to court the main Auschwitz a trial took place in 1963 and 5 foot 6 men were sentenced to life for some long prison sentences but only 6 man so. All this is still today disturbing. It still costs a very long shadow of course for instance one thing in German law it's legally For been in Germany to deny the historical fact of the Holocaust in Germany the constitutional court has ruled that this is constitutional to outlaw the so-called Auschwitz Lie which denies with that were murdering going on there and only grounds that the whole present German state today is a counterexample or the. Complete opposite of the national socialist dictatorship so you're right it is an emotional thing to Germans today and but one has to deal also with it in and a little way for the lead article on the front page also tries to draw some lessons of our strength always has to be remembered we must never forget and of course we must always fight to preserve the rule of law and human rights and human dignity everywhere in the world so that's. The bottom line of all these articles we haven't missed a prime number if I know that is Philip look at that Frankfurter Allgemeine Zeitung London correspondent as foreigner know what's going on in l.a. It's the night of the Grammys they're the musical Oscars if you like but the vent been overshadowed by the News of the death of the basketball player Kobe Bryant hundreds of people who were hearing earlier on from David Willis of being gathering at the Staples Center which is both where the award is taking place but also the court for the Los Angeles Lakers that Kobe Bryant played for for many years so the awards host Alicia Keys said the ceremony was cloaked in sadness following the death of a man she called a hero Let's speak to b.b.c. Correspondent Peter both Ziad Peter what in a what a night what a night and of course you're absolutely right in describing it the way that you do a tremendous amount of sadness because Kobe Bryant was a friend it seems to just about everyone in Los Angeles he was a son of this city he was musician to an extent himself he was an aspiring musician very early on in his career he's got a lot of friends in the entertainment industry and of course playing at exactly the same venue where the Grammys are taking place right now so really no surprise it had to happen it's been happening over the last 3 or 4 I was very short notice of course but plans to really turn the show into a tribute and that's exactly as it's playing out a tribute to Kobe Bryant live the singer who has actually the most nominations and opened the show the 1st performance and she said tonight is for Koby and she sang. Because I Love You which is off her album The up of the same name when she moved into biggest hit. Which is truth hurts and in fact she then went on to be the 1st winner of the night for best pop solo performance for truth hurts but then as you say Alicia Keys is the main host of The Grammys and she paid her own tribute very somber start to the show she said everyone was feeling crazy sadness after the loss of a hero she described him Kobe Bryant she said were literally standing here heartbroken in the house that Kobe Bryant built of course a reference to the venue of the Staples Center and she then melted into a performance alongside bodies to men and she sang a little bit of it so hard to say goodbye to yesterday she ended this whole performance by simply saying we love you Koby but it is. An entertainment event isn't this the Grammys the the highlighters oppose of the music who year these awards and somehow I know you know from my experience in Los Angeles in of America music generally or mere American music business generally that they will be able to. Balance both sides of the conundrum that they're faced with both on the one hand. To pay tribute to Kobe Bryant whose house they are in as it were but also the same time to be able to entertain people nevertheless Yeah exactly and it actually reminds me a little bit of when Whitney Houston died which was just the night before the Grammys and a lot of people on that weekend there was the initial sense of how can we carry on but they did and it was a sense this old showbiz adage I suppose that the show must go on and on it did turn out it to be a big tribute to Whitney Houston and the same sort of atmosphere tonight although Kobe Bryant he wasn't he was actually a musician. And he wasn't ultimately famous for that but yes he enjoyed. Playing music yeah. I do you know and again number I'm trying to come trying to balance both sides of this conundrum both I think listeners do want to hear about the Grammys as much as anything else but 1st of all tell me I understand those a little bit of frustration from basketball fans wanted to page of you to Kobe Bryant because they're. Being held back there is a security cordon around the Saban Center is there not yeah and I think that is purely a security issue on any Grammys Sunday there's also always going to be tremendous security police cordons around the Staples Center it happens every year as the celebrities are arriving in their limousines and it's just part and parcel that goes along with a major entertainment event like this it happens on Oscars weekend it happens on Emmys weekend and it just sadly tragically coincided with the events of the past few hours the Staples Center being really the place that people instantly turn to because that is the place the venue that they say we associate with Kobe Bryant and they wanted to get as close as as possible but of course all fairness to the authorities they had to balance these 2 things to give funds as much access as possible but also maintain the security for the Grammys so a difficult situation I think for all concerned but certainly many many fans have managed to get through I think there have been several thousands in downtown Los Angeles getting pretty close to the Staples Center being able to pay their tribute it is the home of the Grammys the riches of the grab his estate was as of in there was of many years ago game at all costs must be 30 years now yeah 30 years exactly since I was at the Grammys arrived straight off the plane or went to the Grammys It was the year that. Milli Vanilli basically may go yeah there that while I was there that year famous you were there. Reveal the you know they weren't saying it was a dozen songs exactly and I remember it was a fabulous venue in any case you understand why people come from all over the world to the Grammys it's the biggest entertainment award show in the entire world eventually the largest amount of nominations in categories who else is up for gongs the song. Yeah listen 8 nominations 2nd tying for 2nd place x. For of course old town of row of the most successful song of all time certainly in the American charts 19 weeks in the Hot 100 chart the longest running number one in u.s. Chart history and a fascinating song as well melding rap and country and controversial in some circles said to be not country enough to be in the country charts the successful because of all of the different remakes is the new $91.00 featuring more really mixes than any of the record that yells there and little Not 6 still a newcomer really 2019 being his breakout year as it was for less and as it was for Billy Eilish who also has 6 nominations they're all new artists which makes the Grammys this year doesn't really interesting cause they're all of course contenders for best new artist not hotly contended category but they're also all in the running in the main categories as as well like Album of the record of the Year and Song of the year so it's going to be really interesting at the end of the night which of these new artists comes out on top and Billy Eilish I think is probably favorite actually for Album of the year with that wonderful title when we all fall asleep where do we go and here she is she's a local favorite She's from Los Angeles and if she wins in that category she's only 18 years old she would be the youngest performer ever to get Album of the year the 2 previous younger ones were along as Morissette who was 21 Barbra Streisand 22 years old when she won her 1st Grammy in 1963 can tell you I'm genuinely genuinely interested in this year's Grammys I'm sure in her early weighed together resolves. I as 80 year old has breached me on video Eilish so I've had the run down of the I know everything about love know the music is one I generally good luck to her grave for the music industry she wins but also. If he gets a Grammys go it's a drag Billy Ray Cyrus on stage and they've got to come in the cowboy outfits as well of course you know well what the planning to do is that would be a live performance of Old Town Road with all the different collaborators that he's worked with They'll all be on stage together which is going to be quite a sight thank you very much of a catch up with the later on presuppose that in Los Angeles find out what the headlines are in this woman's Chicago Sun Times with Lynn Sweet from there and Lynn I can see you're leading with the story that must be dominating all the news networks in the United States is one absolutely the helicopter accident that resulted in the death of National Basketball Association Doris superstar Kobe Bryant and his daughter it has wiped out every other story a cable news the Sun Times website other says. We have a variety of stories to Chicago is huge basketball town and he was friends with the Congo girls and the superstar the Bulls Michael Jordan gave an interview to one of our reporters who says in reaction to Kobe Bryant's death Words can't describe the paying. It's so everybody's trying to look on every. Every angle on what happened what helicopter accident happened and just the study released so Michael Jordan is still an important figure in Chicago even though he doesn't play anymore. Is retired and he had it was just a sad statement words can't I. Can't. Excite think express to pay them feeling I love Kobe he was like a little brother to me we're used to talk often. The President Clinton issued a statement President Obama issued a telling statement President Trump early right after the 1st. Workout that there probably been excellent. Oh that said I He said basically I hear that earth theory there's x. That he's a president he could have waited and checked it out and just said it was very sad but the gravity of this story is such that it's throwing the impeachment proceedings up with t.v. List everything else off front pages right now so I read a ship is hungry for the story says as you could expect it's it's a shock when any superstar goes dead and I think this read with. With the big basketball Telic Chicago it's particularly heartfelt Well it's been felt only across the world as you can imagine Kobe Bryant is a global icon I suppose as well when you say people are hungry for more information not least because the police have been so reticent in giving any more information 9 people altogether died in that crash Kobe Bryant's 13 year old daughter apart from him and his daughter but we don't know the identities or tool do we know of the other passage I don't know but I do know everything is going to be investigated including the history of helicopter. Pilot. Records about. Any big accident we have federal investigations but there's going to be a specially. I think investigators outside the federal government about because. Kobe Bryant Well it could only the only thing. This does is it has this sad tragedy is it brings the nation together because sports is a great unifier has a lot it hasn't done well I mean I just look at the coverage right now and I have to say I have an extreme left or right publications but the shock of this tragedy kind of puts people at least in the zone to just focus on her. New. York you know when I flip through channels just try and get the facts out as to what happens no one is saying this is fake news isn't that something yes. Mr Trump prove how divided the nation has been in the last 3 years isn't it something that the death of a sports icon should be able to have that kind of an impact Well I want to kind of . Go there for a moment because this is what is this about it's tax sake it's real journalist Charlie what's happening and it is the essence of our occupation of what we do why we do it. What we are dedicated to and so if this serves to have people that so carelessly toss around that term take it so and. Then Thanks anyway whatever Ok I had with a quick thing on another topic just to tell you but I think that well otherwise you could do it in 10 seconds yes I heard you talk about the Grammys Michelle Obama won a Grammy for talking cocaine for a cure for how to thank you for that. The Chicago Sun Times are not going to find my now from Monday morning trying to find the number 080859 or 9693 feet and you know nothing any couple anyone on this p.c. Radio 5 Live. In. The news on 5 life should be.

Radio-program , Parade-high-school-all-americans-boys-basketball- , Olympic-medalists-in-basketball , African-american-basketball-players , National-basketball-association-all-stars , African-american-businesspeople , Naismith-memorial-basketball-hall-of-fame-inductees , American-basketball-players , Los-angeles-lakers-players , Rhythm-and-blues-singers , Nba-slam-dunk-contest-champions , Arista-records-artists

BBC Radio Norfolk-20200113-070000

One local school has been given a grant to celebrate So what are we going to find out more so return to tradition and the turn of the plough I'm joining excited school children who are part of reviving this centuries old tradition intil the old saints now more for more later on and plans lunch for him as well the weather comes from Elizabeth Razzi nicely dried in the daylight hours with them spell the brightness and French and tending very wet and windy later on 3 the day all the details in 5 minutes were thank you. A 701 this is b.b.c. Radio Norfolk and your Monday morning news comes from Janet Harden senior members of the royal family are gathering at the Sandringham in West Norfolk today to discuss the future of roles for the Jew conduct as a Sussex Harry and Meghan want to step back from their duties and spend more time in North America the Prince of Wales the Duke of Cambridge and the Duke of Sussex will be at the meeting which will look at a range of options these people wait outside Sandringham say they're disappointed I think it's very very sad especially for the queen. I don't think it's any way for Harry and Meghan to treat their grandmother I think it's a shame I think Harry and make them would have been a lot better off being full members of the family rather than trying to do the room thing so I hope it's soon sorted out in the interest of everyone especially the queen. One of Britain's oldest department stores bills which has stores in Great Yarmouth and is hers warned that it could collapse is a difficult time for retailers as Devon I'm starts to close 900 stores a Mothercare shops stop trading today here's our business correspondent Rob Young wheels which has $22.00 branches across the country said it may have to appoint administrators the company is negotiating with landlords over rent and is talking to 2 potential buyers another retailer and the venture capital investor Beals has been around for almost 140 years but poorer than expected Christmas trading threatens its survival even if its immediate future can be assured store closures are have been ruled out with a risk to jobs the British Retail Consortium has said last year was the high streets worst on record a charity says putting disruptive schoolchildren in isolation is damaging their mental health the practice involves removing pupils from the classroom and placing them in booths where they can't see or speak to other pupils the Center for Mental Health says this can be traumatic for some children this mother's 2 children have been in isolation at one of Norfolk secondary schools and she wants parents involved more in the process I don't think place I mean isolation at Scole you actually have that process of discussing the bad behavior which is why it's important for parents to know about it to discuss and work through it and find a solution so they don't get back there again the north south m.p. Clive Lewis finds out today if he's still in the race to become Labor leader he has until this afternoon to get the backing needed to join the 4 other candidates who've already secured a place in the contest. Police are investigating a fire in Great Yarmouth overnight it broke out at a residential property on Mill Road although people needed help with smoke inhalation it's understood no one was hurt in the fire in the Philippines a volcano has sent fountains of lava into the sky at least 15000 people have fled the area south of Manila although some are refusing to leave their homes and farms our correspondent Howard Johnson is there black smoke or started billowing out of the volcano what's happening now is love light lava flow is happening at the moment it's a level 4 out of 5 the government here say that at level 4 the risk of a hazardous explosion could be within hours or days. Alyse you any An unborn student in King's Lynn has been presented with the Queen's gold medal for his studies on Minas Barcus came top in the a level results last year the King Edward the 7th the cademy he and his family met the Queen at Sandringham House yesterday a day he says he'll always remember it was very surreal and very. Had expected me Queen of England and it was just very interesting it's a very fun time all around so I'm going to cherish this moment insanely b.b.c. Radio news now the sport his journey lever thank you very much Dan it's knowledge city have signed her the Berlin attacking midfielder on Dre dude on a 6 month loan deal the 25 year old Daniel Fargas 1st signing of the January transfer window dinner has Duda has been kept 35 times by Slovakia Meanwhile Manchester City striker Sergio Aguero scored his 12th Premier League hat trick and also became the highest overseas goalscorer in the competitions history you're in City's 61 win Aston Villa yesterday a grow past year your memory moved on to 177 goals in yesterday's win Meanwhile Kingsley in town manager in Culver houses the club haven't received any inquiries about Adam Marriott reports over the weekend suggested clubs from the Football League were interested in the prolific striker Marriott has $25.00 league goals to his name already this season and finally Kate King's Lin's Jamie Chesney gets his single campaign up and running at the World Indoor Bowl championship this afternoon he takes on Scotland's Chris Caldwell at Potters and that begins at 2 pm That's all for now Chris Turner how much of a footballer Jamie Vardy of Leicester City is how much of a football here listen well listen to this. In Hello magazine posing with Rebecca Vadi his wife who's been in the news for various reasons so this year or last year they've had a new baby and Jamie Vardy has come up with that he's managed to boil fatherhood down to sounding like a football match. Ok I'm going to give you a quote from a footballer This is the footballer Jamie Valley talking about fatherhood and I think he's going to move to Harvard could just be talking about a 11 draw with Southampton and Premier League he says he's quoted in Hello magazine this local papers today he says Fox is extremely 33 said although Becky tells me I'm a typical man and don't show much emotion deep inside the moon with my kids. There's a very focused figure say Ok well you know I don't know I might not show it but they're deep inside I'm over the moon I told him maybe he's actually played it down because I didn't lose the Southampton Yeah they did He says I love having a big family it's matured me and kept me grounded by them and has it over the moving you or your father so that was it to Mr footballers like him and make everything sound like a football match. Do you see Radio Nowhere folks whether he's over the moon with them but you know he could've been worse I suppose couldn't it let's find out what the weather's going to be like for today and here is Elizabeth what Simi Good morning and you might all be over the me with today's weather I have to say although it's mostly mostly dry during the daylight hours and they leave a little bit of brightness and some sunshine around but then the winds us that to ramp up as we had 3 often you know it's a really quite tough day I think by the time we get in the evening but until then the wind slowly strengthen and maybe one of the showers runs the morning business that mostly dry a little bit of brightness and sunshine temperatures today 9 or 10 degrees Celsius that is what will happen if those winds really strengthening through the evening with the same outbreaks of rain pushing in from the west as was a very wet very windy through the evening rush hour gusts of around 40 to 45 miles an hour I suspect for much of the evening of the 1st half of it anyway so pushing its way eastwards and then the winds will lighten and that rain will gradually self as we head into tomorrow morning if not lows of around 4 to 6 degrees Celsius tomorrow it's windiest still of very unsettled day of weather but of early morning brightness around them breaks very nice the Off to need and along with those heavy downpours a pretty big. Last 3 weather 45 to 50 mile an hour gusts I think there's a Met up with weather warning in place of the strength of the winds tomorrow Wednesday quite a day and then by the time we get theirs they start again and it's wet and when the once more they are very unsettled wake it. Let's take a look at the case doeth for today say the wind south westerly 506 increasing 7 to the vague 9 for a time this the states light a moderate becoming moderate or rough later the weather showers rain for a time and the visibility will be moderate or good but occasionally poorly is better it's the knee b.b.c. Radio Nowhere thanks very much. Christiane I had breakfast spell it with recently with you write for the program well not for you say so much the center of the world today or the it will feel like it if you watch the news programs because the Sandringham summit the centenary showdown whatever you want to call it trying to thrash out the details of Prince Harry's and Megan's decision to try to step back from frontline role duties all happening in Sandringham world we're going to be there later on in the program and we'll find out what the people of Norfolk think about that I will tell you more about one of Britain's oldest department stores possibly collapsing Chris Gore and I have breakfast in. Welcome to a busy Monday morning here on b.b.c. Radio Norfolk get the latest on most Sandra showdown talks coming up we will be live with a reporter Joel Bennett in Sandringham a little bit later on it's the dominant story on the front page of a lot of the papers today and he's happening right here in Norfolk but another thing we're looking at today is whether a school pupil should ever be removed from the classroom and put into isolation no matter how disruptive they are the charity at the Center for Mental Health says No In fact they believe putting children into isolation is damaging their mental health and they think it could in turn lead to even more challenging behavior his Auntie Bell from the charity who we spoke to earlier although it might manage the time maybe necessary for safety some instances it can actually kind of exacerbate the problem longer and so you end up with Mall. Just behavior kind of decorative cycle if you like we need to think about how we support schools to become more supportive of children's behavior and not just clicking off in schools to be different so let's look at this from the point of view of a child who has been placed in in isolation our reporter Andrew Turner has been speaking to the parents of 2 children who've experienced it and they want to remain anonymous because they're worried about the ramifications for their children but listen told me that sometimes I think you need to for find out the values of what has gone on before they're actually put into these isolation rooms because it is an Oist situation that the teachers are always right in always a situation at the child's always right I think they can be a bit mixed feelings and bit better understanding if there is discussed between the parents 1st I mention it's not supposed to be a pleasant experience being isolation is after all some kind of punishment Absolutely I mean it is some kind of punishment I do believe there should be aspects like something like this in school whether it's the right way about it or not I don't know because I hear several stories about these things in isolation freedoms children who speak. Sometimes it's the facts that they kind of cut cut come across that that they could sit in there and they don't really do much they don't actually do any lessons as such which I mean one of the main things or at school for is to. Do the lessons and learn and if they're in isolation and not learning from that then it's a bit pointless how many times would you say you children have been into isolation that's why maybe 3 times and did you see where the school had come from by placing them into isolation for a spell. Obviously if they've done something that warrants a punishment then yes there is that the right type of punishment excluding them from the rest of their Pais teaches retain general school life and this idea that it could affect their mental health that actually isolation perpetuates more bad behavior is that something that you would agree with with your children's experience. No not really it just depends how it's dealt with. And then between him and Skolem find in the balance of discussing it with him and talking at 3 that I think place I mean isolation at school you actually have that process of discussing the bad behavior who it is why it's important for parents to know about it to discuss and work through it and find a solution so they don't get back there again and that's exactly what a children's mental health charity has suggested that parents should be more involved in finding the solution so you don't repeatedly get into isolation absolutely are completely greater than a main. At the end of the day you are parents they are your children you want to bring up the right why not the wrong way so if you want to give them the best but it depends what's happening in these isolation rooms if they're not learning from it they're not going to learn to become better and go for doing their education if they go into these isolation rooms and there's nothing for me to do and I just sit there for the die then what would you want to do when you're 131415 you misbehave more so you can just sit in there and they were absolutely nothing rather than or so have you noticed anything like that because I magine. Your children aren't the only ones or school who are getting put into isolation there must be children who have different behaviors as a result of going into isolation yeah there's different things that go on I'm going to speak to several parents innocent silly things I mean. Things that be dealt with in the classroom or of them that strains Weisel ation take them out of their environment because when you take someone out their environment and put their kind of seen as being a bit different Wherever not it's from other people's or wherever it's from teachers but if they keep end up nice relation I kind of get bit of a stigma and do you think the school is a bit too trigger happy with isolation of the 1st response rather than actually the last resort yes absolutely absolutely believe I mean when I was at school. The teachers dealt with things in class more it was very much a last resort to be sent to the head teachers and then. And get your parents involved these days it just seems to be very very quick I think it's also used for the wrong reasons I know there's a lot of schools that do it for silly reasons like wearing jewelry and incorrect uniform and nail varnish and whatever if if you're not dressed appropriately they're not the rose but it doesn't automatically mean you don't have a right to learn do you agree with what you've just heard our schools are not at least as too quick to put children who are disruptive or breaking the rules or whatever way into isolation should we be worried about the longer term effects that has and maybe they come back into the classroom and are more disruptive as a result of what's happened to them but on the other side of the coin we've already heard from a teacher this morning is going touch with a program saying last but all this time in a class of 27 year one children and so on the behavior is appalling the only way that we can deal with it at the time is to remove the the worst culprits that there's not really a more effective way of doing it what do you think we're going to be talking to the chief executive of an academy trust in Norfolk who believes that in some cases. Isolation can be used in a positive way our schools in Norfolk too quick to isolate a disruptive people or actually is it the only way of dealing with them without harming the education of the other children in the class what you think 103897321 that's the phone number you can send me a text 813 double 3 Start message with the word Norfolk and it will continue to talk about this through the program this morning here on b.b.c. Radio Norfolk It's now 716. 0 as preschool on b.b.c. Radio Norfolk the headline to charity says putting disruptive school children in isolation is damaging their mental health and candidates to become the next leader of the Labor Party have until 230 this afternoon to win enough support to stay in the contest in sport city have Sunday attacking midfielder Andre dude from her to Berlin on a 6 month loan deal brought with sunny spells the chance of a few showers today turning cloudy of this afternoon with highs of 10 Celsius 50 Fahrenheit coming up at the Queen is holding talks at Sandringham later today in an attempt to map out a future path for the Duke and Duchess of Sussex following their announcement that they want to step back a senior royals will who are people waiting outside surrounding him yesterday make of all this after he for the care of his best travelling. Is Kaylee thank you very much you are looking around this morning at the moment quite slow towards the thick on the roundabout trying to get towards knowledge or to use your delay starting to form a 47 from day one towards knowledge that's heading towards the having a man to show roundabout was a fairly busy as well if you're heading towards King then a 17 starting to slow towards pullover on the whole things in the sense is not looking too bad at the moment if you can safely updates me there the number to call 803 aids 97321. On b.b.c. Radio Norfolk hire fancy t o d n all the noise the other day Emily's in later if you miss t.v. Over. Weekend Yeah Bill don't you when you think about that new song I've been playing. So I'm finding out all about the latest gadgets in a bit. Oh I see God in the concert later they go one cup it's a c n n do you break with Chrissy Jackson every weekday morning from 10 on b.b.c. Radio No 5 you're part of. And Chris is back today from 10 including the Norfolk nor use it has been going since the 23rd of October the current no noise would you believe if you think you know the answer to me and each weekday morning for details on how to enter you can see all the guesses so far on our website b.b.c. Dot co dot u.k. Slash radio Norfolk I think I'm allowed to give when a close am I so I won't know I'm tempted by one but it's a 23rd of October it's been going since Incredibles but maybe today today I don't know. If you think you can put everyone out of there me 3 and solve the North noise competition Sundram summit sounding showdown it depends how tabloid you want to be about it but senior members of the royal family will gather at Sandringham today the Scots future roles for the Duke and Duchess of Sussex hereon make it announced last week they want to step back from their duties and spend more time in North America so we know that Prince Charles Prince William and Prince Harry will attend the meeting which will examine a range of options and Megan is expected to chip in by phone from Canada to we've been speaking to people who were waiting to see the Queen outside the church at Sandringham yesterday our reporter Jill Bennett has been asking them how they feel about the whole affair I think it's very very sad especially for the queen. I don't think it's any way for Harry American to treat their grandmother. In a normal family let alone a royal family so I feel desperately sorry for her and the whole family I think it's. The shame I think Harry and make him would have been a lot better off being full members of the royal family rather than trying to do the wrong thing so I had peace soon sorted out in the interest of everyone especially the queen who's had quite enough to put out maybe just lately and we're all think she is wonderful and just wonderful child. Every right to follow dreams have always been born to rule family but all they ever got their own opinion I can do in life and I deserve to raise all think personally that I'm like yeah offing size about my gray bacon knew what she was song and so now she just change it and she's taken the how me away with it without a small person for what's she knew what she was getting the intake and now she's now taken how you away from this family during boil or not that that because of who they are that was going to have this whether they're in the family or at the family level going to well they're going to have to. Know because of how you'll never. Leave lead a normal life like us have lead up our lives but. Not us I just think it's a shame we really. And this is the way of going to go as well maybe. You should have gone and spoke to the fleet before my release of the statement and I think that's what. The family order for I think everyone has the right to decide what they want to do with their life I think as well I think I actually have been saying I think I just regret how it played out I think there's a lot of unanswered questions I know have been far better to advance those questions for go public with the decision because I think now it just sort of undermines the royal family and I said I mustn't miss a bit it's not nice really. How you feel you have pretty much the same believe they could have. Organized it all and I think generally the royal family like to sort things out in private before they make it public and as much as Harry Megane have said they don't want to play up to the media they kind of have created a media storm in the manner that they've they've done everything say kind of got back on how they want to do things a space I mean do you think they should be in this country or do you think you know if they want to live in Canada they should get on with it I think they should get on with their if they don't want to be in this country but I equally think they should both be over here at the moment to sort out I think they're making themselves look divided by being in separate countries when they should be in it together and really they want to go off and lead a separate life together so sort out together to allow that to happen and that is what some of people in Santee I'm waiting to see the royal family over the weekend make of the events the Sandringham showdown standing up summit depending on how you want to describe it is happening today and it's going to be live for us in Sandringham after 8 o'clock and I think should we just link for position with a number of other cameras and journalists and reporters is say it's the place to be today in terms of the spotlight it's on Norfolk and will be you're focusing on that during the program forgotten thoughts on how it's come to this and what you think should happen. By all means are 103897331 I know we talked about it last week on the program but if you if you've picked up any more information from what you've read or heard over the weekend and it's changed your opinion 13 couple 3 starting a message with the word no for now one of Britain's oldest department stores could collapse into administration it has been warned big deal switch stores in Great Yarmouth to slow stuff Beccles and with speech said a 1000 jobs are at stake if they cannot find a buyer Bale's began trading in 1901 but took over the department stores of Angler co-op in 2010 giving it a foothold in East Anglia though it shut the store in King's Lynn Then in November 28th seen Bales took over Palmer's in Great Yarmouth and Lowestoft a company that goes back over 180 years and return or spoke with the owner of bales last week and joins us from Great Yarmouth marketplace this morning and who is this a surprise I guess it's a matter of who you speak to Chris but just looking in the windows at the Palms at the moment you see the final clearance of it's winter sale and prices dropped by 5060 even 70 percent massive discounts can't quite clearly trying to shift stock but I've spoken to people who shop regularly and bomb in Palmers those who knew palm when it was family owned and then have noticed the difference since Bill's takeover people telling me that they haven't been able to buy the stock that they like to buy and I suppose really they've been a bit suspicious as to what's going on behind the scenes and only a few days ago I spoke to Tony Brown who is the man who took over but used in fact he bought it from its previous owners trying to secure an interview with him because. He's closing down its store in Great Yarmouth this week that will happen on Wednesday and I want to do find out from him about the impact that closing the closure of Devon's will have on Palmer's And also there had been reports as well about the company refinancing and so I wanted to get a word with him and he agreed to be interviewed by you over the phone. On Thursday last week saying that he couldn't be live this week because he was going to the Caribbean on Saturday and he said he well we haven't managed to me him with trying to get a hold of tiny brand by phone and by text since those days when he agreed to be interviewed by you at 10 30 in the morning and we just haven't had any contact from him since so we're not sure if he's going on this holiday with the weekend news about abuse or not yeah I suppose this this was a clue to us that that also well because I was due to speak to him last week at 1030 took a look at that but it was we're going to play the interview for you this morning but we haven't been able to go to him so we haven't gotten into the night he hasn't answered his phone responded a text message on several occasions I've tried on Thursday and on Friday he hadn't hasn't picked up the call all but when I did speak to him on Tuesday he said that Bill was in a reasonable position despite Haifa Street trading being difficult and reporting losses as a company for the 2nd consecutive year he told me that they were in the process a fairly standard process of refinancing the company's debts and he confirmed that without a couple of stories we're likely to close he wouldn't identify which he's pretty much dismissed reports of the company being up for sale as well saying that was just a formality in the process of seeking new investment he said there had been no expression of interest in the full takeover he described as a technicality where they had to be offered for sale as a going concern but he hadn't expected to bid and when he agreed to be interviewed by us. He was pretty much going to be straight with us here on those terms and explain the situation but now it's emerged over the weekend it was on the National Youth news yesterday that the group is on the verge of collapse 1000 times and jobs are at risk with new investment and the b.b.c. Has learned that there are 2 potential buyers One is a regional rival and the other one is a venture capital investor now. Stalls in Los often Great Yarmouth joint Bale's just over a year ago says the Palmer family had anything to. Well yeah not exactly I spoke with Bruce Stark who was the chairman of Palmer's and he was the 5th generation of Garwood Burton Palmer's family Bruce's children didn't want to take over the business and that's why Palmer's entered talks with be using spring 2018 for a takeover that deal collapsed then Tony Brown who was the m.d. Of bales led a management buy out and I understand he took over the retail arm while the previous owner held on to the bill's properties and became the landlord those talks resumed with Palmer's later in 2018 the takeover happened in November so just over a year ago and the Palmer still was both in Lowestoft and Great Yarmouth where refurbished but of course with Bill's already having what was the co-op department store in the north end of last off that building closed in April last year so he spoke to start to decide anything to yeah it was just a brief conversation over the phone he was abroad at the time he is still abroad and he told me that he's saddened quite clearly by Bill's heading towards administration he said when he sold the company he did so to try to secure this the future of the jobs for his staff when I asked if he now regretted selling to Bales he hinted that he had that had things been able to be done a different way it might be different now but he conceded that we are where we are regrettable is that was he said he hoped that Bale was in particular the Palmer stores would keep trading through some kind of rescue deal and of course he expressed concern for the staff that he knew personally had served for him for many years as Palmer's But as for the next moves that's something we will be watching very closely no doubt very stark will as well thanks and truly understand life Great Yarmouth Smalling with the news over the weekend Bill so well Britain's oldest department stores could collapse into ministration that would affect stores in Great Yarmouth to slow stop Beccles and with speech just before Kelly brings you the travel let's talk to Sandra who's going to school this morning about our main story and that's the rights and wrongs of putting disruptive peoples in. Classrooms into isolation now we're hearing this morning a campaign for mental health groups saying it doesn't do them any good. You want to tell us about your son Daniel Yes. Very capable as a child when he started school right until he was nearly 10 he was a nightmare always in trouble you spent a lot of time under his desk instead of doing lessons and try to deal isolation room number going back a long way and. Had a different teacher when news 10 started back in we were in Scotland so he started back in the States and by September she turned a new way to do with it she put his desk next to her and every time he finished work she gave him more work and just kept him completely occupied the whole time. School year just. Boy numbers school that approach was more effective than sending him out the classroom award or putting him in isolation Yes Very much so yeah what's it like for Sandra to debate because people often say Well obviously these 2 are knocking the right support at home but how hard is it when you're a parent and your son is getting in trouble at school a lot he must be so sad must be tearing your hair out is so frustrating we ended up going to a place which was called. And they said he was bored. Proved to be the case at school. And sometimes reacting in that way where you just send them out of the classroom and put them in isolation actually we're hearing this morning that can make them worse so you don't make them worse. Ok sometimes mine has been foster parents and we've dealt with a lot of disruptive children and we've found with new posts 80 percent is keeping them occupied so yeah and maybe that doesn't happen in classrooms but it's hard for teachers there isn't it when they've got 30 children to deal with they can't be there on everyone's desk putting more work on every time they're finished but nowadays they do have a lot of teaching assistants says you know most closers can have a teaching assistant if the school can afford it. And you know that maybe. They need more teaching assistants who could do with it but it's true because classes of got bigger as well over the years haven't made so you probably the adults to child ratio in the classroom is about the same if not worse than it was but Sandra thanks we call really appreciate. Any further thoughts of 803-897-3212 give us a call his k. With the travel news thanks Chris Well at the moment looking around sensible and you seem like a on the whole this is the usual busy patch is starting to form a 47 from a cool towards knowing starting to slay through the burning and stretch so this doesn't slow as well on the a 47 the other way from Durham towards no it's heading towards the haunting a matter show roundabouts Now if you can updates me 803897321. Of her Chris on b.b.c. Radio 732 the sports news following the news headlines with. The Queen and senior royals are gathering at Sandringham in West Norfolk today to discuss the future of the do you conduct with the Sussex that follows the couple's announcement that they want to step back from some public duties bills which took over part. His department store in Great Yarmouth last year is under threat of collapse due to poor trading at Christmas the chain has another $21.00 stores including branches and despite calls was beach and Lowestoft it's being claimed by a charity that children placed in isolation in schools can be mentally harmed the Center for Mental Health says the practice is widely used by schools in Norfolk and across the u.k. The Labor leadership hopeful and north south m.p. Clive Lewis will find out today if he's through to the next round both himself and Emily Thornberry are still to get the minimum backing needed to join the 4 other candidates and at least 15000 people have fled the area around a volcano in the Philippines which has started spewing ash and lava officials fear it could erupt imminently b.b.c. Radio news there's more to eat. B.b.c. Radio news folks forwards. Jolie has almost 14 years thank you very much Chris Morris city of completed the loan signing of Slovakian International on Dre Duda the 25 year old attacking midfielder arrives on a 6 month deal from blunders league a side head the Berlin Duda has found 1st team opportunities limited under the new coach Juergen Klinsmann this season although he scored 11 times in an impressive campaign last time out due to has been capped 35 times for survive having made his debut as a 19 year old in 2014 Manchester City manager Pep Guardiola says striker Sergio Aguero is a legend that's after he became the highest overseas overseas player to score in Premier League history of past here real memory and moved on to 177 goals with a hat trick in City's 61 win it's Aston Villa yesterday afternoon while their list says his record is unique. They were born scoring goals and they will die a scoring role so does everyone he has just won sure was simple as that. He had. Special Gift you know they were nice. And happy everything good was staying with the Premier League and Eddie how limits he's concerned about his position is borne of manager following their free near home defeat against what food bowl must remain in the relegation zone following the defeat by travel to Carrow Road on Saturday to take on the canaries in a crucial relegation battle House as the club are in a tough place right now anybody who has an answer of respect for the game or of the would be horrified that performance I think it was a lack of respect of see that's not the ball of manager Eddie out anyway moving on Kingsley is how manager in Culver houses the club haven't received any offers for talisman Adam areas there were reports that clubs in the Football League were looking at the striker after his brilliant season so far Marriott to score $25.00 times in the national north already however he couldn't help the limits from going out of the f.a. Trophy to absolute on Saturday Culverhouse understandably wants Marriot to stay but says any outcome must be good for all parties. Believe the end of been the phone call for. And that's you know this we can just carry on with their and see what happens but. Oh please stay with us. Has to be the right fit for marriage from as a writer for the focus. To the world indoor Bowl championships or Hopton in Kings Island Jamie Chesney brings his singles campaign begins his singles campaign this afternoon should I say when I'm see takes on Scotland's Chris Carswell at the Potters resort Chesney will be hoping to go further in the tournament this year having lost to the eventual winner Stuart Anderson in round 2 last time out Mervyn King returns to action on Thursday in the singles in his partner David Gourley won their own in pairs match on Saturday some darts now when Wayne Warren won this year's b.t.o. Well darts Championships after beating fellow Welshman Jim William 74 in a dramatic final roar and also become the oldest man to lift the trophy a 57 alarm from the snake world to Mark Selby and being Zhang we both suffered shock defeats in their opening matches of the Masters early cancer beat Selby by 6 frames to 4 while being was beaten 6 free by Joe Perry and finally set a horse race in and how to make it was 2nd again it had a few of those in the most recent weeks with Titus bolt Sedgefield racecourse Today's tip is off at war for Hamilton you lookin for stars Southwold he runs in the 620 race and he's the number one poss and that's all for now Chris I like your style there Joe Because said. Norris city of had wanted to 2nd place this recently as well in a 2nd place are Trafford on Saturday they did in a candidate who was race no us came 2nd in that one you know they were there about how you know when it went when we said you know they haven't finished all they've broke free and ran on to the nearby motorway then that this is it that doesn't happen often if you know once last year but we had a couple of winners last week as well so they're very very new He's a he's radar wheezed is on scope at the moment well let's hope it stays that way I think with the Canaries it was just last a difficult one because they haven't really been swept aside with that much easier than many games. Sleeze and but neither of they had very many for no hammerings like that so it did come as a bit of a blow but they suddenly plan as you've been hearing and will tell me more about the new boy Andre Duda later on in the program what about the weather for today is Elizabeth Racine accounting rather windy later on this afternoon but it should be mostly dry during the daylight hours with both of brightness and sunshine around hot temperatures of 9 or 10 degrees thousands then through the evening rush hour the winds will strengthen further got the wind of up to 40 to 45 miles an hour along with heavy downpours of rain is either very very windy through the early evening but all pushes its way eastward and it's a much karma picture by the time we get to tomorrow morning but tomorrow it could be windy I still don't have the details in half an hour let's return to our top story this morning we're calling to b.b.c. Radio which if you are just joining us say it is 739 a charity is suggesting the practice of putting school children who misbehave in isolation is damaging and traumatic the Center for Mental Health is warning the effects on youngsters who've already experienced challenging backgrounds is likely to be worst and it says rather than dealing with bad behavior it can actually lead to people's being even more disruptive we were joined earlier and the bell from the Center for Mental Health think what we're saying is not that schools are doing things wrong it's that we need to think about how we support schools to become more supportive of children's behavior and that means a whole raft of measures that include creating a safer culture in schools they create includes training teachers in child development trauma or mental health they include putting mental health on the curriculum so this is really our attempt to look at the evidence around mental health and see what we could do over time to make things safer and healthier Jim Adams is the chief executive of the Clarion trust which runs Hobart high school in Lawton and that was listening to that place going on the program Mr Adams are you where do you stand on putting people in isolation is. Sometimes that the only option is it the right thing to do. Well I think that the 1st thing to say is that it really should be the decision of the head teacher how they go about implementing their behavior policy and difference girls in different contexts might react in different ways but I think. Most secondary school certainly use sub form of isolation and it's a it's a pragmatic approach really to trying to deal with occasional disruptive behavior it is a difficult balancing act for teachers now I mean we can talk about this one idealistic point of view but when you're in the heat of the classroom and somebody is being disruptive Yes of course you don't want to make their whatever issues they've got worse but you've sometimes got 30 other people to think of as well have an Isa sometimes I suppose you would say removing a disruptive people feels like the only option Yeah absolutely and you know I mean teachers are very skilled at dealing with behavior and very well trained and 99 percent of the time classrooms are a common purpose for every now and again we're dealing with human beings as you said sometimes up to 30 in a class youngsters will make mistakes and sometimes they paint themselves into a corner and you find yourself in a situation where you have to just remove student for a period of time in order to make sure that the cost is settled and that you know that there's orderly and youngsters are allowed to flourish and learn what about the argument that maybe we should change your thinking on this and that teaches maybe could do with more training when it comes to dealing with people who have mental health problems I mean yeah I mean I don't think we'd ever be in a position where we were saying that we wouldn't want more training I guess the question is Where is that training going to come from where is the time for that training going to come from teachers are incredibly pushed at the moment we've had . All sorts of services cut over the last few years. And there really isn't the capacity within score so there once was so although Yeah absolutely I would be in favor of more training I don't see where that's going to come from or where the time is going to come from really important but you know teachers should be in the classroom the concern is is I think that while do taking a child out of the classroom who is being disruptive feels like the right thing to do at the time actually when they come back in May this is happened to 3 times to them they then actually become more disruptive so it's a bit of a false economy. Yeah I mean what I would say is that most schools where all the schools I've worked in and most schools that I mean contact with it's not a case of just removing a child sitting there for an hour or 2 or perhaps even a day and twiddling their thumbs very often and that the good practice is that those those areas are fully staffed and they usually start with highly trained and capable people who will help them to address their behavior so it's not a case of just removing a child over and over again it's a case of you may have to remove that child that child with them in addition to being taken out the classroom so the cars can can get on with their work the teacher can get on with teaching that child will also have input into managing their own behavior and it's also an opportunity for them to reflect on and have some some in top from or from a trained adult so it's not just a case they're removing and then just keep doing the same thing it's a case of actually trying to get some young person as well and people often say will blame the parents they're obviously not being. Disciplined or look after one another home but even dealt with you know thousands of children thousands of parents over the years does not necessarily follow or do you sometimes get very well meaning parents who when we've had someone call in this morning who admits that they they were tearing their hair out. What their the son was doing at school and they felt that they were doing all they could to support the school and all they could. Yet it's a very difficult question to answer to be honest I mean I've still with. Young people who've had incredibly supportive parents and the circumstances are that this young person just isn't managing to control their behavior there are some instances where parents perhaps aren't particularly supportive of the school and that maybe because of their own circumstances they might have quite a chaotic home life for example they might be really under pressure might be all sorts of other family issues going on in the background so yeah parenting is is absolutely important of course is fundamental but parents themselves are under a great deal of pressure you know it's not an easy time to bring up a family at the moment Adams Thank you Chief Executive of the Clarion trust which runs Hobart high school in La and after 8 I'll talk to Paul McCann who runs Norfolk teaching training and believes isolation should never be used even as a last resort which is a really interesting way of looking at it what do you think of 803897321 where you can take state 13 double 3 start the message with the word Norfolk is it ever right to remove a child from the classroom and what other options are there if you in a busy class refute them and things are not going to plan some as being disruptive other than removing them what else can you do maybe you've been a teacher maybe you've seen it work in other ways maybe you can think back to your school days and think about the times that you got sent out of the classroom and I wonder what effect it had on you like 103897321 we can take state 13 double 3 Start a message with the word nor for. Preschool on b.b.c. Radio nor for some main story at 745 there are warnings that the practice of putting challenging people in isolation in Norfolk schools is damaging to their wellbeing but the queen is holding talks at Sandringham later today to try to map out a future. After the Duke and Duchess of Sussex following the announcement that they want to step back as senior royals in sport Norwich City have a new signing on to do the attacking midfielder back in internationals joined on loan from her to Berlin will find out more about him later on brought with sunny spells the chance for a few showers turning cloudy of this afternoon with highs or in 10 Celsius 50 Fahrenheit coming up today is plough Monday yet Monday everybody are you celebrating one Norfolk school is going to join them or find out what it means what it is and how you should be celebrating Plowman day in a moment but. It's also new roadworks Monday for a large part of nor It wouldn't travel Chris years ago bank playing closing today for 11 weeks for upgrade work to do bear that in mind and plenty of big signs up in that I version signs are already up as well as to bear that in mind used to travelling through that way looking on the senses not looking too bad this morning starting to slow though a level heading towards nor age and I think the roundabout adding at least an extra 10 minutes there is a slow as well on the north washing road to be $1150.00 heading towards knowledge and the n.d.o. Around bound from Durham towards nor into the 847 so as usual from hawk ring it towards the haunting a matter show roundabout and the 17 very slow at the moment coming towards kings then the Pearl over roundabout before the a 47 adding at least an extra 15 minutes on top of a normal journey time that's back to past tell me at the moment so we'll keep an eye on that if you spot anything it's over 803897321. Briscoe on b.b.c. Radio Norfolk on Saturday Breakfast this week I heard about one man's bus pass adventures in memory of his late wife my journey was 1200 miles last year 1200 miles 32 buses and it cost me $8.00 pounds 50 to do our charity it's every day I think about it and it is a challenge and the special concert performances taking place in the city last performances used to be horses and friendly and it's just a kind of white. That turned out now because his ideas about how you have to behave in a theater are out the window join me testing on this Saturday Breakfast from 6 on b.b.c. Radio Norfolk your part of the b.b.c. . Steve Mumford 1 o'clock to day one foot in the groove brings you genuine hits and news headlines from 989-998-9819 extension 91 after 3 Find out what's happening across the county with Mel cook and friends including an invitation to step into the history mystery escape room war intriguing stuff the one for from 1 o'clock on b.b.c. Radio Norfolk. Messages coming to us as carvings I want to talk to you about in a moment including whether it's time that Norah chanter a new statute has been reading and opinion piece needy plea today which got me thinking I think it will do you as well so we can talk about that in just a moment but now shall we celebrate plow Monday yes happy plan Monday everybody so there's always always something to celebrate isn't there today is plow Monday what is planned when they are you ask Well the 1st Monday after 12th Night was traditionally the day that farm workers would return to work after Christmas until the All Saints the practice of taking the plow around the village with singing and dancing began back in 1443 or so we're going to but he was there at the time but what we got the next best thing is that the village could well have been the 1st in the county to Marquard Monday and now at the local school has been given a heritage from Grant to bring the celebration back to life a sort of thing that had been around in 1443 doing this job we would have sent him to cover but the good news is because of this heritage from Grant even in 2020 we can send him to be across this story good morning Wally with the dancing shoes on hopefully. Yes Yes Good morning you know there is so much all doubt about to date it might be 1453 but it's going to be bigger about a decade but we've talked about centuries it is about a century since last celebre. Plywood here we are then Laurie for me also at the school Good morning everybody I. Know you were all raring to go now also class teachers are least Williams who is behind this project. An old tradition that sort of for you to worry how did you stumble across it so we came across the how mundane through Project where doing through the heritage of truth and sharing the plough and so the children have been learning and research know about Monday and so we decided to have the service because in years gone by at least it was in the time during Christmas and the picture day the farm workers would go door to door and say which donations I've so the church offer themselves and if the residents didn't give enough that it wasn't thought it was a good enough donation or they didn't give one and they would turn up. Residence gardens with the plough we're not planning on doing that with. And we are excited about this and what do you know can anybody else tell me a little about the plow when plowing the feels. You know like you're forward to learning all today aren't you oh yes yeah right well I'm going to go outside and I will have a look at the plan. So yes the plan itself is coming from a local farmer and we have borrowed crates which we will then drag it well hopefully the children will take it for sex up to the church and as we carry it and then the power we bless and the children will be singing and dancing and yeah it's going to be great day hopefully you all know what cloud does don't you yeah what does it do. So this is for you yeah all right what you want to take me outside and we'll have a look at your plow because because because it's all just race it isn't it's all very nicely done it's wasting a trailer I think actually got to work to pull it Miss Williams Yes so we're going to. We're going to have teams of children pushing up to the church with a couple of tractors as well to come along with us with the procession that's a straw and it's got big candles last night yeah good of you ever used to play out before her no no no no plough No no but it's going to be fun pulling that isn't it you know I. Said. The only boy had longer still do so he said no but it's it's nicely decorated who can describe that for me. And tell me what's on the screen. And its atmosphere and like. Hands on me yeah that's right nice nice job and of course the cold metal in this weather between that so we've got daffodils incarnations and a nice yellow ribbon so you can excited about this yeah it's going to be a different day to tell you you know good and is everybody in the village going to turn out for you. Hope you know how you hope so well hopefully the listening to this and. Now and then we'll hear a little about it and you're going to carry on this tradition and we hope so we're looking in so that it would be good to see how this year goes it's the 1st year and then obviously if we get lots of interest in the children enjoy it then it will be something that hopefully we can carry on with a lot so that's Have a great day today yeah yeah Ok well you you promised me yeah I think I'm going to have a brilliant day yeah yeah so it's a new experience for the children so yeah well of course it all goes flat after Christmas and New Year just it's nothing to do in January so this is an added bonus is no yes I have a good day but I bought. A house for the plough Great stuff as ever want to put you on the spot here well if it is planned Monday what goes into ploughman's lunch traditionally because I'm not sure I know what would you put a plan was lunch the traditional ploughman's. Are you magic in cheese and pickle that's it. I mean there's more to the spreadsheet is simple food no no don't go don't go all exotic. Cheese and. Cheese and Charlie Thanks Wally plow Monday if anybody else is doing anything to mark play on Monday then do let us know and we think that's the only example in Norfolk today but you might know different and 803897321 or you can text 813 double 3 Start a message ship with the word Norfolk Actually I should tell you north Wald will be a procession to the church as well as a moment's play in the Kings Morris will be dancing tips us 2 examples of things that are happening north would say celebrate plough Monday Tim sparrow plan was lunch what should be in it was a spin looking up and I think this should be some bread in there as well I think sorely missed out. On the ins I usually come with butter and some sort of pickle do you it's the thing I think it's still a thing because I've not had one agency or many. At all for 20 years and I don't remember the last time I saw on a menu I'm not convinced I ever. Probably had one but I'm not I'm not picked it from them then you don't think all right does anyone still do because I. Know I never thought of it until just now I don't think I've seen it on a menu for a long time a plan was launched it does anyone still serve a plan once lunch what should be in it that it will be somewhere in the does let us know or 803897321 or you can take state 13 double 3 starting message with the word Norfolk on the subject of this you always want to provide me with a list of celebration days yes so it's not just plow Monday today is also peach melba Thanks Melba day now Peach Melba is a dessert that I've always been quite fascinated by because I think it might be unique I think you've got bad memories of it from school having Yeah they used they did a version in school dinners which it is not it wasn't anything like peach melba should be and it was absolutely horrible so I got bad memory. I think Peach Melba is the only that is named after a person. Ok You know I didn't know this and I knew this so I just checked it because I thought you know things check you know a lot of you know you know we like myth busting on this program I told you that it's named after a person then I thought I'd better check yeah and indeed it was invented in 892 or 893 by a French chef called Escoffier you know the Savoy Hotel in London and he created peach melba to honor the Australian soprano they nearly Melba they gave her the peach melba is named after somebody I cannot think of another. That is named after a particular individual is named after some no I can either but I'm sure the response we just had I think it's I think it's unique among desserts that would be a good lunch for someone can have today inspired by she could have a ploughman's lunch followed by Peach Melba. He must have a good laugh he might have to have a good afternoon nap after that so those are 2 food questions for today we're marking Plowman day by asking whether the plans lunch is going to fashion or anybody still has it and they're putting We want a peach melba because today is peach melba day as well and I'm going to see only dessert named after somebody which. Stray pavlova have named after the Russian ballerina and up. Really According to Wikipedia According to Wikipedia I think someone just texted that in as well apparently there's ice cream called to Charlotte Corday named after Charlotte called Idea sassy of the radical John Paul Maritz Ok so I got to go with your life we all know now you have. I'm not allowing that on our menu at American people because no one's ever had that they are no. No And I mean it's not as if this isn't the short ball reference for you it's not as if Angel Delight is named after the former South and United States example Charlotte named after particular Charlotte in the paper about up which Charlotte teach Lorraine No it's not. Named after somebody sings get their names from you know if it will be able to tell us I'm going to keep the rain you interested and yet I know that we've we've gone savory there very early. On this he. Did that he is named after a person well I don't know how they got out of the rain region of France. Kelly. Right now in region of France so I'm putting I was going to say as Peach Melba is unique but it's not because it's been joined by puzzle over or by city and I don't and the pub loads and it would seem crepe Suzette it was named after. The 6 years there is no help at all what I am one claim is that it was created. In your system right in a certain café he was referring to that Prince y O's that his guests included the beautiful French girl named Susan at the swellest named us extremely I'm not sure about that right but really I think we want more that So we want named actually after people and still a thing or has it gone out of fashion in Norfolk in 2020. Get their name is Caylee would you travel Thanks Chris Bowman the king around sunset winds busy in the normal places you're heading towards Norris delays in on the north towards the end yeah roundabout the a 11 towards the think the roundabout very slow towards King's then as well on the 8th 17 heading towards the pullover roundabout frontier only an extra 20 minutes I think something's going on there and I've been tree apparently there's a lorry broken down at the moment to do be careful you can't dates me over 803 eights 9731 thanks Ken it's b.b.c. Radio just coming up to 8 o'clock this is your biggest lesson at breakfast in association with many Melbourne Norfolk news broke my ankle is b.b.c. Radio Norfolk thank. You morning welcome to the program we say to clock on Monday the 13th of January your top story right now should Norfolk schoolchildren ever be put into isolation. If they behave badly in the classroom the Center for Mental Health says no but the chief executive of whatever our academy trusts in the county disagree youngsters will make mistakes and you find yourself in a situation where you have to just remove student for a period of time it ought to make sure that the cost is settled Janet hand and when you.

Radio-program , Health , Towns-in-norfolk , Seaside-resorts-in-england , Staple-ports , Port-cities-and-towns-of-the-north-sea , Post-towns-in-the-nr-postcode-area , Desserts , Psychology , Tv-one-new-zealand-programmes , Retailing , Distribution-retailing-and-wholesaling