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BBC News

this all came about because queen margrethe, who is 83, became the first danish monarch to voluntarily relinquish the throne in more than 800 years. she said she was stepping back because of health problems. we are saying this problem in iraq pictures a minute longer. a moment in history. we see frederik the new king of denmark addressed his new subjects. tens of thousands of people gathered their outside the palace. it is almost like a royal wedding, isn't it!

One-way , Queen-margrethe , Throne , Denmark , Monarch , Health-problems , 800 , 83 , King , Tens-of-thousands , Problem , Subjects

Influential with Katty Kay

strange, cos "i just don't even feel that. "i feel incredible sadness. "i feel loss." and the loss i'm feeling, i'm realising, is a loss of love, but i don't feel guilt. like, i was a great dad. she had a great life. we loved each other. there was, you know, to use the sports metaphor, which she would love to use, we left it all on the field, right? so it wasn't like, ok, we lost, but it's not that we didn't try. so i didn't feel the things that were coming at me and in the books that were written about it, i'd look at it and i'd say, "that's not my experience." and i finally concluded that i'm going, i think i have to approach this in a funny way, the way i approach literary subjects. it's sort of like it's my vision i'm trying to purify. it's my particular... everybody has an unusual circumstance, a unique circumstance that, that how you feel and how you're going to go through this is how, it's partly how you're wired, it's partly what your relationship

Dad , Guilt , Sadness , Love , Cos , Life , Loss , Other , Books , Things , Use , Wasn-t-like

BBC News

consistently pulled at around 80% in terms of popularity. they are picking up a very strong legacy from her but they will of course obviously do things their way. they are a modern, informal couple. not bogged down with the traditions of monarchy and royalty. they will have a different approach and outlook. some of the issues they will campaign on ouraround campaign on our around sustainability, campaign on ouraround sustainability, the environment, mental health, isolation. they will have a slightly different outlook and take in terms of the issues they pick up. they will be different subjects they will want to run less. there will be a different mood, they will be more informal and modern in their outlook but i think they will be lucky because they know they are picking up a very strong legacy from queen margrethe. the picking up a very strong legacy from queen margrethe.— queen margrethe. the new king's sandy comes _ queen margrethe. the new king's sandy comes the _ queen margrethe. the new king's sandy comes the heir _ queen margrethe. the new king's sandy comes the heir to - queen margrethe. the new king's sandy comes the heir to the - queen margrethe. the new king's i sandy comes the heir to the throne. —— sign.

Things , Way , Couple , Legacy , Terms , Popularity , Course , Traditions , 80 , Some , Issues , Ouraround-sustainability

Influential with Katty Kay

but there's a scene... we didn't sleep together. i know you didn't sleep together. michael laughs and that is not what the noise has been about, just to be clear, 0k? 0h, 0k. this is a family—friendly programme. there's this... but it is interesting. i find this sometimes as a journalist, you know, how close do you get to somebody? how much does natural human empathy kick in against my reporter's instincts? i'm sure you have that. you must�*ve had that... so, i've had that problem with other subjects because i know how sensitive and easily wounded they might be. he was unbelievably easy in this regard because he himself, by his own admission, lacks a lot of human feeling. i knew he didn't feel anything about me. he didn't care about me. he never asked me a single question about myself. he never asked me what i was doing. he didn't ask me, like, what was it like to write moneyball? nothing. no question like that. no interest whatsoever in me, and i sensed it. so, it was pretty easy for me not to have that much interest in his feelings. that's interesting.

Noise , 0k , Scene , Michael-oher , Friendly , Journalist , 0h , 0k- , 0 , Subjects , Somebody , Instincts

Influential with Katty Kay

katty laughs i shouldn't do that. here. no, i think it shows up enough. you write about such an eclectic group of subjects, but you write about them in a similar way. is that fair? if your point of entry is character, and it doesn't matter where the character is, you can go anywhere. if you think about, like, my first book here, this one. all right, that taught me a lesson, and the lesson was... liar�*s poker? liar�*s poker taught me a lesson. and the lesson was, if you can attach the reader to a person, they'll follow that person anywhere. and i knew i needed to explain, like, the mortgage bond market. who wanted to read about the mortgage bond market? but once you were attached to me, they would follow me into the mortgage bond market. and so all these books are just using the same device. so, when you say i write about it in the same way, i think that's true. it sort of tends to be characterfirst, and the character leads you through material, teaches you, gives you insights, all the rest. but a lot of authors write about character, but you also, on top of that, i'd say the kind of thing

Way , Character , Subjects , Group , Doesn-t-matter , Point-of-entry , Katty , Book , Lesson , Anywhere , Liar-s-poker , Right

Influential with Katty Kay

you're known for is choosing these subjects that are quite dense, quite nerdy, don't sound on paper. if i was giving, getting the elevator pitch... right. ..i wouldn't think, "oh, yeah, that's a blockbuster subject "that everybody�*s going to want to read about." then you turn them into movies that brad pitt wants to be in. so, it's funny you say that, because i have found... it's almost a reliable indicator that i've found my next subject. if i'm at a dinner party and someone says, "what are you working on?" and i say it, and the eyes glaze over and there's no follow—up question and it's like... you can see them thinking, "god, ifeel so sorry for this bleep. "he's got to write this book about that." and what has happened is i've gotten particularly interested in something, and seen something that's interesting about it, that isn't obvious to the world in some way. and so, it actually is... that ends up being a good thing in the end. it's sort of like... it's a little bump. do you really want to read about high—frequency trading or do you really want to read about the united states government? right. right? and the first initial bump—up when someone says, "actually, you do because..."

Subjects , Everybody , Wouldn-t , Elevator-pitch , Movies , Don-t-sound-on-paper , Blockbuster-subject , Brad-pitt , Someone , It , Question , Subject

BBC News

and they said, "no, no, no, he's going to muck in. "he's going to be doing loads of interviews." morning interviews and sunday interviews." and actually, thus far, he hadn't done some very... he'd done some very precise interviews, specifically when he visited ukraine or when he visited the middle east about those subjects. but until today, he hadn't done one of those broader interviews where you're expected to defend the whole sweep of government policy. now, i think it's interesting that he did it on a day where foreign affairs is at the top of the agenda. but i'm still waiting for that interview where he goes out on a sunday morning and says, this is why rishi sunak deserves to win the next election. these are the problems with labour party's policies on health or on the economy or whatever. we haven't seen that from him yet and i think that is one of the things that downing street wanted from him, as well as the experience of foreign affairs, which they're using him for a lot, was also the campaigning skills that he used to win two general elections. it's very interesting because at the beginning of all of this, my impression from the new foreign secretary's empire was actually he would not be seeking to get overly involved, which is rather different

Interviews , Morning-interviews , Loads , One , Middle-east , Agenda , Top , Foreign-affairs , Government-policy , Ukraine , Sweep , He-hadn-t

Newscast

it's a train that my paper says today was a steel chain, had a bet on it. you've made thejourney in the back of a van. i think they're a duo. i think we should just say on this newscast, it's almost like a regent. he's almost a regent. also on that sort of meta point about david cameron, how interesting it is that david cameron came and did this interview, and i was shocked and he went into downing street and became foreign secretary when i finally managed to raise someone in downing street on the phone to talk through it, i said, "you know, "is he just going to float above the fray or is he going to muck "in to the politics?" and they said, "no, no, no, he's going to muck in. "he's going to be doing loads of interviews." morning interviews and sunday interviews." and actually, thus far, he hadn't done some very... he'd done some very precise interviews, specifically when he visited ukraine or when he visited the middle east about those subjects. but until today, he hadn't done one of those broader interviews where you're expected to defend the whole sweep of government policy.

It , Newscast , Back , Bet , Train , Van , Thejourney , Duo , Paper , Steel-chain , David-cameron , Someone

Influential with Katty Kay

to somebody? how much does natural human empathy kick in against my reporter's instincts? i'm sure you have that. you must�*ve had that... so, i've had that problem with other subjects because i know how sensitive and easily wounded they might be. he was unbelievably easy in this regard because he himself, by his own admission, lacks a lot of human feeling. i knew he didn't feel anything about me. he didn't care about me. he never asked me a single question about myself. he never asked me what i was doing. he didn't ask me, like, what was it like to write moneyball? nothing. no question like that. no interest whatsoever in me, and i sensed it. so, it was pretty easy for me not to have that much interest in his feelings. that's interesting. do you ever have that with your characters? do you feel they've got close to you or into your heart or into your brain, and therefore it's hard to be objective about them ?

Subjects , Somebody , Instincts , Ve , Human-empathy-kick , Reporter , Problem , Lot , Anything , Human-feeling , He-didn-t , Care

Influential with Katty Kay

of love, but i don't feel guilt. like, i was a great dad. she had a great life. we loved each other. there was, you know, to use the sports metaphor, which she would love to use, we left it all on the field, right? so it wasn't like, ok, we lost, but it's not that we didn't try. so i didn't feel the things that were coming at me and in the books that were written about it, i'd look at it and i'd say, "that's not my experience." and i finally concluded that i'm going, i think i have to approach this in a funny way, the way i approach literary subjects. it's sort of like it's my vision i'm trying to purify. it's my particular... everybody has an unusual circumstance, a unique circumstance that, that how you feel and how you're going to go through this is how, it's partly how you're wired, it's partly what your relationship was with the person you lost, it's probably how they died. it is dependent on a lot of different things. so this is going to be an individual sport, me figuring out how

Dad , Use , Guilt , Wasn-t-like , Love , Life , Sports-metaphor , Other , The-field , It , Books , Things