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The Nine Editors, or, A Commentary on the University

The Nine Editors, or, A Commentary on the University
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Athens , Attikír , Greece , Hertfordshire , United-kingdom , Cambridge , Cambridgeshire , Norway , Alexandria , Al-iskandariyah , Egypt , United-states

Fredson Bowers (1905–1991) – Encyclopedia Virginia

Fredson Bowers (1905–1991) – Encyclopedia Virginia
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Charlottesville , Virginia , United-states , Japan , Boston , Massachusetts , Clark-university , Russia , Richmond , London , City-of , United-kingdom

Catholic university in Rome attracts criticism for handling of plagiarism accusations

Catholic university in Rome attracts criticism for handling of plagiarism accusations
catholicworldreport.com - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from catholicworldreport.com Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.

Germany , United-kingdom , Rome , Lazio , Italy , Clairvaux , Champagne-ardenne , France , Texas , United-states , Washington , Ireland

KUCI 88.9 FM [Radio Free Orange County]-20191113-170000

Timers are with together. Scientific. Computer now. Computer. Through. Views and opinions expressed on this program do not necessarily represent that. It's what you see for the region for more information. Visit P.C.'s were actually looking to. And good morning and welcome to this Nov 13th 200-1000 edition of writers on writing on. Point 9 f.m. In Irvine we are broadcasting to you live from the University of California campus in Irvine streaming on the Web dot org always available via podcast you can find us on i Tunes or underwriters on writing and as we have been doing the last little bit we are doing a little survey of our listening audience and inviting you to write in let us know how we're doing let us know what you want more of maybe you want less of you we just want to get your thoughts and we've gotten so much great feedback in fact today's show is based on some of that feedback that we got but we we would just love for you to write and Barbara's website I mean Barbara's e-mail is penned on fire at Earth Link dot net pen on fire earthling dot net You can always write to me at Marie stone m.a.r. I.e. Stone at g. Mail dot com and just let us know what you think so based on your feedback I'm trying to book more authors for the full hour you wrote We listened and one of the recurring thoughts was to spend a little bit more time with one author and dig really deep so we are doing that today and as a reminder I'm your host Marie stone and as we always do each and every Wednesday morning we are chatting with authors about their books about their process about their craft today we are spending the full hour with Kathleen Shine who was on the show with me way back in 2011 for her novel The 3 Weismann's of Westport it is a treat to have her back on Kathleen shine is the author of the internationally best selling novels the love letter which. Was made into a movie starting Kate Capshaw and ram it was nice which also made into a movie the misadventures of Margaret starring Parker Posey Kathleen's other novels are Alice in bed the bird house the evolution of Jane she is me The New Yorker's the 3 wise men of Westport Finn and Lady They may not mean to be but they do. And her new novel which we are talking about this morning is the primary ns in addition to novels she has written for The New Yorker The New York Review of Books The New York Times Sunday magazine New York Times Book Review her essays have been clued in the best American Essays in 2005 fierce pajamas an anthology of New Yorker humor and the big New York her book of dogs she grew up in Westport Connecticut but she lives now in California Kathleen welcome back. Thank you it's an honor to be here oh I and 2 and to be here for a whole hour I know I know I love these hours when we really get to to dig deep I feel like a lot of the half hour shows we get just to the meat of things and I'm like Well time's up and it's very frustrating. We need an update on Hector the last time we were on the on the air Hector kind of joined did a little bit that was 8 years ago so we need to Hector update Well well only actor updated Rather's own oh yeah Hector died in August 1 week away from his 17th birthday oh I'm sorry so there's no Hector is no more although in my mind he's still whining on the table after that sleeping and that's my story and I'm sticking to it. So yes yes I remember that interview then really well he did join in and there are some great there's some great photos of him up on your website encourage people to check out your website because there's so much great stuff up there but you but you did an interview with with Hector at some point it was just it's lovely and his photos are up there yes. Only lived in New York Long Live Hector. So the grim Marion's is your 11th novel I just want to take a moment to process 11 novels and I'd love to do just sort of a little retrospective across your work you know I mean you've been publishing for almost 4 decades like you. Since the eighty's and I just wanted to take a moment to look kind of across this whole body of work and across these decades of writing and sort of see. If you think about drawing connections across the book trying connections about voice or about the your own interests as writers woman err is human. Like do you recognize yourself across all these 11 books or do you feel like you keep reinventing yourself each time. You know it's funny you ask that because just last night I was thinking about that because it's been such a long time and I've been thinking about you know I was when I started writing my 1st novel I was still in my late I was in my late twenty's which now seems like ridiculously young. And it's so far away but I do think that there's a voice that is maintained I hope but I mean I imagine I don't go back and read my books very often sometimes I have to look at them to find something and and I'm often pleasantly surprised and saying oh that's something that when I when I read something. But I still have the same every time I write a book which is you know confused. What concerned am I ever going to be able to write another book Am I going to be able to write the next page and at the same time you know occasionally some of this excitement. As as as I've been you know will write in a big spurt so the the experience of it has not. Changed in that regard the process has changed with every book I you know life changes and so you sort of. Work around life in different ways. But I don't know I'm I'm I get very very interested in something and you know Darwin for the enlightenment and then that affects what I'm writing and becomes part of what I'm writing and this case is something that I've long been fascinated by which is language and linguistics. So the subjects are different but I think the. Fact that I get you know it's very excited and caught up in something that has has remained the same over the years yeah yeah I was just trying to do it for myself like looking across a lot of your books I mean I was trying to think late I mean there's humor you know all the time because that's just kind of who you are in your voice you know even when you're dealing with pretty grave subject matters there's some levity and a lot of great humor and I was kind of thinking my identity keeps coming up a lot you know him and personhood and you know I'm sorry what did you say I didn't hear the I was I was I was just talking about identity you know that that Bo identity Ok yeah yeah that that seem kind of crops up a lot and. I don't know I mean I think I just think it all kind of interesting to look at you know things across and just kind of see what the connective tissue is between you know between the novels and well I think you know my very 1st book Alice in bed was about. And that one was quite autobiographical but that was about someone a young woman. I guess 20 years old 19 years old in the hospital in a lot of pain and yet it was not able to walk and yet it was a comic novel and so I think that sort of sets the tone for what. You know for how my work goes which is. I'm very I'm very interested in how. People absorb adversity one way or another and and I know that you know people often say oh you know adversity makes you stronger I think it's people who really survive some kind of challenge and adversity. Are people who manage to stay the same rather than get stronger but that is the strength to be able to remain yourself even as things change I mean which is not say it don't grow but but to be able to maintain your identity in the midst of all this chaos that is happening so I think that's that's something that runs through runs through all the books that's really interesting going to you not to dwell on that that's right that's right. You kind of answered my next question which was you know does it get easier over the 11 novels and I guess the answer is No it's you know I mean it's some ways it does you know a little bit more fluent I I can if if I hit a problem. In a you know composing I can I have I can think of well there are various ways to get through this which I certainly did not know in the 1st couple of novels but in another way it gets harder because that can take away from the authenticity and freshness of writing and you don't want to you know write in a formulaic way because you know well if this happens then that could happen or if a character is stuck in this position there are these 3 basic ways that you can move the character around then you end up writing formulaic. Which I don't want to do so it's a constant. Battle not to get stale and also you know what every time I really do worry that I've got I've run out of ideas and I'm at the point now where I'm just. Trying to start another book and I'm thinking do I have any ideas left you know I don't want to repeat myself. But I also don't want to. Do something just because it's different you know so it's always trying to. Find something else or you can't really wait for inspiration you have to kind of work and then inspiration comes while you're working if you wait for it you'll be waiting for me anyway I've been waiting forever. But there's there's just the attention in trying to. Be. Right something that is. Fresh and yet something bad is real and authentic Kimmie and I'm. You know 66 What's that going to be it's not going to be a 20 year old you know I'm not going to have characters who are. I'm not going to write my 1st book over again in other words right so it's what what is my 12th book you know I mean what's that going to be. And that's a it's yes it gets harder simple answer yes a card or rather than easier I think Well as you're talking I'm also thinking that not only do you have to come up with fresh ideas and a fresh way to tell a story but all those like little details of how you notice life and how you notice human interaction and what your characters look like and all those little things that you know the telling details would also get sucked up over 12 novel 3 you know that you would. You have to find a fresh way to describe. You know a city or the environment or all those all those things that you know your 1st ideas are now used up and yeah I know that but that's interesting I mean I think that. One of the things I sometimes worry about is I mean look a lot of writers and I certainly draw on memory too for different scenes for interactions for the way people see. Themselves or see each other. In kind of draw on an identity or memory of something and and all you know all characters have child hood whether they're in the book or not and so you know there's definitely a danger of just using the same anecdote that you've already used or using a memory that's very very powerful to you but it's already manifested itself in another in another novel so you know that's sort of an interesting challenge that I never expected to have to to face but it it's not. So that's I think that's part of I think oh my goodness have I made this joke before. And you know have to be on the alert a little bit but usually about less of a problem because the characters are new people who are meeting for the 1st time and have to think about you know and they create their own backgrounds and their you know they reveal I should say their own childhood or background or. 9 or a sense and that's very exciting that that discovery of new people is is always very exciting to me I remember the last time we talked and we were talking about you said that if you find one little thing like I think you had a character who made some racial slur or I forget what it was but something small a piece of dialogue. A little observation that those little things really open a character up to you and make you realize them as a wholly other person you know kind of as you're talking about now and then they reveal themselves and reveal their own language and how they speak and how they interact and all those things but I really liked that idea that if you can grip on to. Michael is a distraught was on a couple weeks ago and she says there was some some observation of people on the subway and she said Stop sniffing me you're sniffing me and I know you're sniffing me and just that little snippet. You know just that word sniffing I think is great but but just that opened up this whole world of how they talk to each other and who this person was in their backstory and I do think if you can let things that genius I mean you know she is better at that and. Work is so rich. Because of the small things kind of just opening up the whole world but I do think that's you know a piece of a little bit of dialogue a little of an accent even or a look that someone gives someone else you know while they're speaking I mean this can just open up a whole character in a whole world. And then in the grim areas a lot of this had to do with with the words on the page for me the words that the characters spoke opened up a whole universe of character development and conflict and the way they understood the world and. Relationships and a lot of that in this book. Reveals itself through the way they spoke what words they chose and raw and that was new and really fun and fascinating for me very fun so let's set the stage for the Grimm Ariens and get into the nitty gritty of the book I'll kind of let you introduce it for people who haven't yet picked it up who who are twins are and kind of how how how the book came to be. Well the book is about. Twins twin girls identical twins and their names are Daphne and little and their parents named them after the 2 names really for the same kind of mind minor goddess. And they are completely fascinated and absorbed by language from the time they're babies they have their own secret language. And the book is about what language it's about their relationship. And how language holds them together and ultimately. Helps spur them apart and it's also about the relationships and how you. Push him pole of a relationship but I think. This is how it came to be originally I want to try to book a bad translation I don't know why I just something was going on in the literary world someone was complaining about the translation of Elena Fernandez books saying it was too good a translation made the books better than they were that amused me and I thought oh I want to write about 2 translators having a few about the way something very small is translated and then I thought yes brilliant idea the only problem is you don't speak any other languages. Out. And then I thought of. My wife said Oh what about. Dear Abby and you know have you ever thought about Dear Abby and Ann Landers they were identical twins and they have a huge future for their you know their whole adult lives and that seemed like a really interesting idea I was a little bit frightened of working you know trying to understand twins but as I started thinking about it it got more and more interesting and they seemed like the perfect. Twins are you know the perfectly Malaysian ship to sort of. On cover the dynamics of being so close and at the same time wanting to be individuals. So I started writing that book and it was terrible and also I was in a complete depression pizza's of because of the 2016 election and everything was terrible and bad and I couldn't do anything and you know the world was dark and the page was blank and then and then Janet gave me this funny little book to cheer me up called English as she is spoke which is this Laris book that was written in the 19th century it is a phrase book for people who speak Portuguese who are in an English speaking country the only problem is the person who wrote it apparently had no idea how to speak English it's possible it was written in the 19th century Mark Twain wrote an introduction to it because he thought it was so hilarious it became a sensation in England in the United States as a comic book that people would read out loud to each other and it is it is very funny and the phrases are where yes and the mis you know I think it probably went from Portuguese to French or either French to Portuguese and then to English or they don't nobody really knows who wrote it or exactly what how it came out so crazy so as soon as she gave me that a it cheered me up and b I thought oh no this is what I want to write about this is my this is my hobby my passion hobby which is words and you know I go on blogs to you know we're going to stick blogs and follow all the stuff that I barely understand and I thought this is this is what's going to happen with these twins they're not they're going to be language people and that's how it came about. And once I really started writing it with that in mind it it started to work and blossom open up. I'm thinking about a scene in the book where. Daphne is struggling with trying to write an article for Vogue and she can't get access to it and Laurel gives her the idea of how to approach it gives her at the idea of food and at that that scene just comes to me as you're as you're saying your wife gave you this book and it opened everything up that as the writers sitting there struggling trying to figure out what's the door into this material how do I access it it's nice to be open to the outside world for their ideas and you know you never know where they're going to come from right. Just I think there is a certain amount of there and get pretty in writing and yeah you have to you know have your ears and eyes and heart open. In order to. Be. Creative I think and yes when when Laurel. Laurel is in that scene is in that. Chapter is pregnant and miserable in the early months of pregnancy and and drafting it wants to write a column about words that are fashionable So this is in the early eighty's and. I remember in the early eighty's there was suddenly this excitement about food and food people it's so funny now the things that were so exotic in the eighty's now it just seems so normal but you know Lugo was. Please a was a big raspberry vinegar it was in every recipe you could imagine and. And it was considered something you know really exotic 'd So that's that's what Laurel is able to convey to Daphne and dast is like oh yeah. Yeah that's astonishing those are fashionable words now I can write this piece the whole thing opens up and that happens all the time well I wish it happened all the time it when it happens when you're working or writing or thinking it's you know it's it's the most exciting wonderful moment of all when you suddenly see the way forward yes yes that's interesting and patch it was using the word fashion and when I came across the word fashion in your in the group Marion's it is interesting to see you know I mean aside from fashion fashion to see what books what ideas what and you know I mean we're in such a. Precarious political spot right now and into the way it is in fashion. And political fashion as you know all of those ideas I think are really interesting to your point about being miserable in 2016 and writing this I do have to add in it was such a pleasure for the days that I spent with this novel to be in the 1980 s. New York not here was just pleasant you know it was really nice to be in. The time without cell phones without social media when they couldn't just text each other it was refreshing I got a different God Yeah well I think that's part of the reason why I wrote it was I really wanted it to be assured. Of signing a book with I think it it has some gaps as well but. You know I needed. Sort of I needed distraction but interesting distraction and. So I wrote the book I needed and I think I hope a lot of people you know will will feel the same way but you know part of me wanted to write like a big political security hole novel but that's not how I process the world it's not how I understand the world and it's not how I write so I did the the thing that I was able to do under those circumstances in those circumstances well and the other into a book about 20000 words go figure. I have to admit this is really embarrassing but I didn't realize until this book that Ann Landers and. Dear Abby were I didn't even know they were related let alone identical twins I didn't know that I don't know how I missed that because I used to read those columns all the time and. Anyway well isn't it isn't it odd I mean isn't it sort of amazing they were identical twins one of them got a nose job I forget which one which I'm sure in which I use that in the book from sure it must've really but such a rejection of the other one you know. I found them fascinating but not making enough to write about when I wrote it they were. They were not. By scholars don't interest me in the same way that language does so yeah that. Didn't initiate my fascination with them. But yes there there are some identical twins around. And. They deal with things in different way you know what I think is great about using anything like real life to then create fiction is I always like in it to a swimming pool where vs the ocean and the swimming pool and landers and Dear Abby gave you this side of the pool to push off from and then once you could push off you could swim on your own as opposed to just being in an ocean where you have not you know you're just flailing out there but I really like these ideas of anchoring in something and it just gives you the shot of of ideas and enough little interesting details like the nose job to have some creative license and then you go off and do your own thing and and Daphne and Laurel become their own people . But it gives it gives you something right there. You know that that's it just gives you something and it's comforting I think for a writer to have something to start from. I think you're right and I like this watery analogy because I was talking to someone while I was writing this and saying you know. Everything's terrible I don't know what to do. Seem so small and and and a friend who is a writer and and she said we just have to Pavel in our own little pond and each of us has our own little pond that we paddle in and I found that so inspiring you know it's like you can always say well I can never thank you and I don't I think it's a bad idea to to think I must write something terribly important because then what you write is something terribly pretentious or terribly formulaic. You know it's written for an audience and I think the more you know kind of focus on paddling in your own little pond. The more important the book becomes to me and therefore I think the more important it is period I love that I love that and it takes so much pressure off the writer to write the the great American novel because as you say it is the straight road to pretension and I love that that's. Per the great American novel just that phrase makes my heart think. More water analogy now you're now you're the bottom little oh you know you're right but. The other great thing about the language in here was that we're at such a maybe every generation thinks this but you know again we're at such a bleak time in our. Not just our political lives but our I mean we're at such a precipice on this technological whatever conundrum we find ourselves in and it's really changing our language itself I mean the way we communicate texting tweeting However we communicate with l.o.l. Zion you know s m h it's really I think not only is the language changing but it's changing our brain and so this revisitation of grammar the proper way to speak how we order words and how the order of those words changes things all of that stuff I think it is so important right now as we're watching our our literal way that we communicate with each other shifting beneath our feet and this just felt like the the right book at the right time to remind us of all of that. Oh well thank you you know as you said that I was thinking I had a brief moment when I was trying to be a medieval s. And. One of the things I had to do was learn periodicity so I could read medieval text and the reason was that the scribes their hands would get tired and they you know it was very expensive to write on on the sheepskin and Bellarmine all the things that they used and they used. A lot of abbreviations mean a lot so not unlike l.o.l. . And you had to learn as you read as you read various documents you had to learn you know or wind over them and there was you know when. You were at the back times and. And so you know I don't think that it's so shocking and terrible that with each kind of technology because that was a kind of technology I guess you'd have to say with each medium that the language will change written language will change the typewriter changed written language as well change things. And this is changed a little bit but it's also created. Created a lot of. New ways of saying things in good ways and so on a lot of. I am not a anti Twitter person in fact I'm an obsessive Twitter person which is unfortunate and it's very time consuming and it keeps me up at night never go on Twitter before bed. That I've learned because of political things but I think that I think all of. This should be. We need to be open. To all of this kind of writing and all of the words that come out in the world I mean who would ever have predicted that pod cast would be so popular any part cancer Radio Radio is old fashioned radio it's what my mother grew up with you know who would have predicted that So I think it's all really interesting and. Yes Grammer for me is fascinating and important and we need to be able to express ourselves clearly and have language mean things rather than obscure things but that you know that having been said. If that's your goal then I think the changes in language are not necessarily bad it's all about clarity and expression and beauty. And imagination you know. Your dictionary of choice in the book was Samuel Johnson's English Dictionary. And I'd love to get your take on that dictionary and why you love it so much. Well the dictionary that the girls are obsessed with is Merriam Webster's 2nd . Second Edition International Dictionary 2nd edition which was the one right before the sixty's when the 3rd edition came out which was a big in the world of lexicography with the big scandal it was sort of like the mini skirt of of dictionaries and that there was a lot of slang and. It had never been allowed before. But Samuel Johnson dictionary is. It sort of like a postmodern novel I mean it's reading it is quite wonderful I. I found that the whole thing is online and sex similes of the you know a facsimile of the entire dictionary. And just going through it and seeing I mean you could be quite funny and has definitions. And also a lot of the words are more interesting and have a different meaning now than they used to and all of that kind of just drew me into it and at the I did not there's a dictionary definition of a word at the head of each chapter that did not happen until the book was completely done I had a sense that I was going to do that but I didn't do it until the end and that for me was very important because when I decided you know I would use one word and then I'd read the chapter through and I think no sarong words and then I'd find another and when I found the right word is when I really understood what each chapter was about so it was a kind of house backwards way. To defining the chapters but it was a revelation to me with the. You know when I found the exact right word I'd been on a little and it made the chapter resonate in a way that you know that. But I could just feel it was right and so that was that was water that was that was the best part of the whole I mean that was like. Sanctions procrastination You know I could just sit and read the dictionary and poke around games for we and it was like oh I'm working and working. But it was really just it was those wonderful heavenly that's really interesting you say that because for a lot of reasons but so you wrote the book. I mean you read the book as the book is which is basically chronological. And then it's because the last time we talked we were talking a little bit about outlining after the fact and when the manuscript is completely done you go back and try and kind of make sense of it now you understand what it's really about who the characters are are not there are can all that stuff. So this this technique of making sense of each chapter by the word that it's trying to you know eliminate Is it strikes me as another way to do that another way to outline it Lexie in a little in an interesting lexicon sort of way I love that I love that interest. I have to finish a book before I really understand it and even then. You know it's very hard for me to. Just give a you know a short. Definition you know to have some say what the book about and I just. 100 pages of $300.00 pages is what it's about. But. But but yeah it is a way of going back and. Outlining it essentially or. At least exposing the outline but there there's you know it's usually there it's just it's just a question of for me you know trying to see. After it's done I certainly you know if I had done that if I had used the words ahead of time before I wrote the chapters the chapters would have been very very dull I never could have done something you know that's how some people write they go forward I go backwards after I'm done Yeah I mean that seems like a really good way to eliminate the. Dangers pitfalls or I guess you know if that's the way you write. Help crotch outlining is if you had had those words you're right at the very beginning you would have written to the word as opposed to written organically and it would have really gotten at a much different feel I would think That's great yeah yeah my dear husband gave me that all of it like on many shows so you're so lucky so fun and so fun. All the history and origins in all the of those words I mean talk about being able to fall into into a book. Or 24 don't have all the volume I you like the big Yeah I have all the volumes we well he 1st God my God you're so lucky he 1st bought those 2 little ones but you needed a magnifying glass and you can't see it yeah. Yeah impossible oh my god you have all the jealous that's wonderful they're so cool yeah they're so cool you're also reminding me. Here's a weird confession but when I was in college I used to take it before I'd have to sit down and write a paper I just picked 2 stupid words that had nothing to do with anything just 2 words that I liked or they sounded pleasurable or whatever and then I would use those words which I came to understand as really free writing but in college I didn't know that but I would construct a whole paper around just a couple pleasing sounding words and. You know then I don't know if I want to do that rewriting I mean that's why I sound like the prompt you know you know in a writing class. But. I think sometimes. Inadvertently too that there are words that are sort of stuck in my head or. But I know sometimes I write word 2 words so you know one word just sort of leads me to the next word which leads me to this sentence to this which leads me through this thought that I hadn't realized I was going to think. And. Maybe that's how everyone every writes I think it's I think I think the definition of that is thought. But I do someone feel like you know the sound of a word. To me to the next word just as much as the meaning of the words sometimes Yeah right right well that gets to the poetry I mean there's a you know. One of our twins turns into a poet I don't know if I'm giving too much away but but there is some poetry in here and I was going to ask you about poetry and kind of what that has meant to your writing if you are a big reader of poetry and if it kind of informed some of this book obviously did I yeah I I read poetry I go to spaces where I read a lot more that's all I read and then I go through phases and years where I barely read any poetry it's for me it's a different. A different kind of concentration and absorption. So in this book what happened was I was reading for research a book about English language in grammar. Written by Charles Rees who was a linguist and teacher and who had collected all of these. Sources for his book about language for his grammar books had collected all of these. Excerpts from letters from soldiers right before I think which right before World War 2. There were letters from families of soldiers saying you know. Complaints about things or you know please find my son or can you know we need my father here because you know we're so poor and they were he had different some of them were far more formal and some of them were nonstandard English. Written by people who wrote with bad spelling or nonstandard English and his purpose was just to show that there are different ways of saying things and he wasn't saying one is good and one is bad he was saying there's a standard English and then there's the way a lot of people really do speak and it was very interesting but as I was reading them they were so touching. Heartbreaking some of them and they stopped being excerpts showing me grammar and they really started being voices and and then that's what happened when when Laurel read them and they became a kind of poetry. So that was very organic thing that happened to me to me as I was researching which I've been. Allowed Laurel to experience in a similar way really interesting that's beyond That's really beautiful. I should remind our listeners that you're listening to writers on writing on k.c.i. Point 9 f.m. In Irvine and I am on with Kathleen shine the book is The grown Marion's. It's funny the last time. We talked I don't know if you were living on the maybe you were living on the the west coast then but I also just wanted to ask you about that move from east coast to west coast and how that itself might have changed your writing changed your writing community changed your perspective on life did it make a difference being on one coast versus the other to your writing life. I think. 2 things happened one is I feel like I'm on a working vacation every day that I wake up I can't but we where i am i wonder if I'll ever get used to it I've been here really living here almost 10 years I don't know if I'll ever become blahs day about working out the window and seeing what I see I mean I love it here. I love it when it's foggy which it often is because we live in fairness I love it when the sun is out I love every palm tree I just I can't believe where I am so that's one thing. And it's less stressful and in certain ways it's more stressful in other ways in that my family my mother and my brother live in New York and I'm constantly going back to see my mother who's quite old down. So but you know that's that's a price that I pay for having this working vacation life but the other thing that's wonderful about being here is I am out of the bubble of of New York publishing which is very intense. Most of my friends are writers or you know novelists or journalists or nonfiction writers writers and there's this constant. Pressure and. Stress and nervousness you know everybody is is under the gun and. And there's a temptation to get caught up and not and can measure success against someone else's success and even think about success is is is kind of disastrous for the creative process I think unless you're thinking about the success of the actual work so that's been a great relief to get away from that the downside of that is sometimes I feel very out of it because most of my friends are New York people writers I don't know a lot of l.a. Writers I'm beginning to know more there are a lot of people here I just don't know them yet. So it's kind of like being on a beautiful island. Without the stress of a big city but sometimes feeling a little bit on the outside on the outskirts and I think I like that. Interesting it's funny because the last time we don't think it's I don't think it I don't think it's affected the way I write except that now I have a much better view when I was writing Right right yeah we were talking last time about how some of the easier characters to access or the a central character you really like to be a centric people and I was thinking I think you live in Venice so I'm like there's no more essential people in the world maybe than Venice California but. You know if it's you know they're almost there almost to eccentric to yeah and those people are there fewer and fewer It's really changed even in the last 10 years I mean it's very there are a lot of young young less eccentric sort of techie people and I don't you know I don't hang out on the on the beach my you know on the boardwalk part of the beach but that's not my scene. So those eccentric I can you know they're like. They're they're a bit extreme for my for my case I like I think most people are eccentric that's I know that's a. You know a contradiction but I like the eccentricities of normal people of finding what is really odd about someone who seems from the outside or at 1st glance to be a perfectly reasonable normal person to try to understand what oddities they have in the way they see the world in a slightly crooked way that I really like and find fascinating was that more difficult when you're working with identical twins to make them I mean there are centric there their unit is various centric but then as they become individual women and grapple with each other they have to have their own best interest is obviously with that more do you think difficult or more pleasurable or easy dealing with identical twins trying to draw their characters. It wasn't as obvious to me who they were going to be coming. And it happened very gradually. They started out as you say as a unit an eccentric unit but even within that unit I I already felt some differences between them and then they really as characters do they really began to go their own way and you know and push back at. Anything I tried to you know to impose on the kind of the kind of revealed themselves as different and I was concerned that they wouldn't be different enough I was concerned about whether or not they were going to have real characters and reveal themselves but I think finally they they did I think I was successful or not and. So it's not that it was harder I was more worried about it. But I think that they in some ways . They were so those 2 little girls were so powerful to me they are their personalities were so strong that it was little bit like having you know difficult children and watching them grow up and so in some ways it was it was almost easier you know they were insistent right they're very willful Right right. Yeah they really struck me as. Almost easier to write because of their strong will it did feel even to the reader's perspective that must've from the writer's side felt like the tail wagging the dog or whatever the saying is about you know that they really were going to tell you who they were and what they were going to do and. Oh yeah and then and in some ways they had the other one to. Take off so you know the split between them and. You know really revealed certain things about their about their character and then each one knew you could be an individual while still having this tremendous need to be quote . To the other twin. You know really. Underlined the differences between. Going to steal this observation from somebody else I can't take credit for excited and think of it before I read it but a lot of the characters did have a counterpart in here you know their their father had a brother who felt like his kind of counterpart So there there was this pleasurable play with not just the obvious twins in the book but all of these other twin opposing pulling forces that were in relation to each other. And that was really fun I don't know if that was intentional what. That was I think not I wasn't you know totally aware of that as I was doing it but I think. I think. I recently became aware of this wonderful band Keegan and Sarah and they are identical twins and I listen to the music a lot now and and as I was listening to it one of the songs for example I thought was about. Someone breaking up with her with a lover and I later discovered it was about one of the twins moving out and leaving the other twin behind at a certain point and ice and I it made me realize that a lot of what this book is about is just that movement that magnetic pole of. A relationship and of intimacy and then the opposite magnetic. Pulling away where you want to be you want to have your own identity and it made me think about how much of certainly popular culture like teaching and Sarah's songs. Literature opera is. You know high culture as well as popular culture how much of that is about those 2 contrast. Poles or impulses and I think that's what made this book. Made a lot of things come to you know I want to use the word coming together made a lot of things. Blossom let's say for me. That the the fact that that's what a lot of art is about and that's what a lot of life is about it's about wanting to be close you know you desperately want to be close to someone and have their arms around you and at the same time it's like stop it I can't breathe you know I need some independence so I think that's a lot of what the book is about so well observed exactly right because we're out of time can you imagine if we tried to cram that into a half hour would never work no I really can't but now I'm going back to be hearings. To be impeachment hearings but no I really can't imagine so this wonderful was wonderful I'm going to direct people to your website which is your name Kathleen shine dot com I think you. I think it's just. My I love my domain name. I forgot to renew it or something and turned out to be one played it with a Japanese core porn site. Good catch good catch. But on there are all these you know wonderful interviews people can get more information on all the stuff we didn't talk about today about what you're reading in what you recommend to read interviews you've done all that stuff information on all of love and books so check that out and what a pleasure thank you so much for taking the time today. Thank you and thank you all remember is that. Really are we are we are fans of Hector going keep keep Actor class. More than wise. Thanks again that was Kathleen Shah in the book The Girl Marion's is out and available now that's all the time we have for today we will be right back here with you next Wednesday morning so until next time thanks so much for joining us have a great great day and stay tuned for more programming on at 8.9 f.m. In Irvine.

Radio-program , Youth , Sociology-of-culture , Literary-criticism , Economics-terminology , Media-studies , Traditions , Popular-psychology , Twins , Lexicography , Emotion , Printing

KFMB 760 AM [TalkRadio 760]-20190219-050000

And Senate passed that joint resolution aimed at repealing the president's emergency declaration it's unlikely to do much more than send. That's because the president's aides say he'll veto the resolution his 1st official veto of his presidency meantime the president urged Nicolas Maduro his military regime in Venezuela to allow humanitarian aid into the country and were you to rated that all options are on the table Here's correspondent Errol Barnett who traveled with Mr Trump to Florida International University the administration's priority right now they say is to get humanitarian aid in already over the weekend shipments of a from the u.s. Was sent to Colombia and it's sitting right now on the border between Colombia and Venezuela this upcoming weekend the administration expects that it be a major effort with volunteers on both sides of the border there to get that humanitarian aid and help those hundreds of thousands of people who could potentially die on the heels of lists coming out last week of priests accused of child sex abuse in diocese here in the u.s. The Vatican drops another bombshell correspondent for the 1st time the Vatican has admitted it has secret internal guidance for priests who fathered children about a consultant told The New York Times and document lays out suggestions for the clerics aimed at protecting the child it comes after the Catholic Church in Ireland released the 1st public outline for those priests could we know the why the story of just. Been crumbling since the weekend and c.b.s. Affiliate w b b m t.v. In Chicago reports that the actor was upset after a racist letter addressed to him and sent to the Empire said did not get a bigger reaction c.b.s. Is Dean Reynolds reports it comes on the heels that small that has seemingly only met with the Chicago p.d. Once there was no law enforcement interview with small lead today and none has been scheduled his attorneys say they will maintain what they call an active dialogue with the police on his behalf this is c.b.s. News video conferencing featuring video and audio clarity with Screen Sharing 3 accounts are available to us that zoomed us zoom video conferencing. 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Local San Diego's talk Breaking News this is a 760 trying to get and I'm advocating that's when the stories we're following the Am 760 now as long standoff at a poly home ended today after the suspect apparently killed himself the suspect had been detained by sheriff's deputies over the weekend and taken to a medical center in power due to mental health issues he was released early Sunday morning a body was found this morning near the scene of a Ramona house fire an apparent suicide a woman and child were found nearby but another man is missing firefighters were able to tackle a fire at a San Marcos home this afternoon the blaze was reported just before 1 pm at a home on Valencia Avenue cause the blaze is under investigation no one was hurt as reported fostered by Father Joe's villages see an end to homelessness donate vehicles to Father Joseph villages your gifts help fund housing and health care for local families go to neighbor dot org or call 1800 dollars to donate today mostly clear on called losen a 40 Cyzon or 60 am 760 talk and breaking news. You . Know they're going to go underground. Deep in the bowels of a here somewhere under the bridge you're going to you're going to this pretty building we once again made contact with our leadership. That whole and the end you make a whole one thing in common a narrative that trumps America is a mess it's racist it's wrong it's corrupted it has to be stopped Welcome back to the market in show good news the great ones back with you tomorrow night Rich Zeoli the honor to sit in for Mark Mark is the reason I got into radio. And also by the way the reason that when all this nonsense goes on I tune in like you do which is why Sam a fellow then I and Mark was all over this whole thing with with the president in the wiretapping very long ago back when they all made fun of him and called him a kook and a right wing nut job and everything else he endured all that and now we know it's all true and you may have endured the same thing if you doubt of the just see Smollett story just he smiled again the actor from the show empire which I don't know you but I don't I don't watch it I don't really watch t.v. I have a 4 year old immature year old so we watch a lot of things that are cartoons like p.j. Masks and things like that but when my wife and I are actually not watching t.v. We're actually hanging out together we're really watching t.v. Because we just you know we're tired we work and then the kids there they're not turning out Empire but I had no idea who the guy was I know a lot of people who go on Twitter and they trash Trump they obviously but I had no idea he was one of them would have known that and it's my job to get to know that stuff you hear on talk shows. In Philadelphia I buy really but I'm on Twitter a lot at Rich Zeoli I know when people are actively out there and they come at me sometimes trolls come at me I didn't know that just the smile it was one of those people till this quote unquote attack happened and then look back and said oh you look look look he's a rabid anti Trumper and he says that's why the attack happened but one of the questions that should have been asked of him was are you so sure that people know you're really this began tag Trump guy on Twitter that question was not asked either by Robin Roberts it wasn't asked because they just again want to believe he's right there's a long pattern of this by the way I have a whole stack your stuff let's see here. Lawyer races no given to black waitress in Virginia is a fake I was from Loudoun County Virginia Kelley Carter who was a waitress at a need is New Mexico cafe in Ashburn Virginia claim that a white man stiffed her on a $30.52 cent restaurant bill and wrote a great service don't tip black people bottom of the receipt but then it was forged says a lawyer for the customer he says for his client did leave the waitress a small tip one penny because her service was poor not because she's black her client did not nor would he ever write anything about refusing to tip African-Americans because of their race according to w t o p this from the college fix the Sumburgh 2018 another hoax black student targets himself and others with racist graffiti there's been yet another incident of race hoax madness this time involving a black student at Maryland's college Phin Ajani Arthur a member of the school's across teams charge on Thursday with 2 counts of malicious destruction of property after investigators determined he was responsible for dormitory swastika graffiti which targeted specific individuals including himself just the other day officials at Drake University and I will determine the racist notes targeting students in dorms were hoaxes. According to The Daily Mail Arthur scribblings depicted swastikas the letters k.k.k. And appeared to include the last names of 4 black students himself being one of the students he was released on his own recognizance but has been banned from the campus. Of course and when this happened you can imagine a number of people came out and said things like these acts of hate have consumed our community and we feel strongly that these must stop and everybody right away rushes to jump but by cut the rate wait your story they rush to come out and condemn this right away this is hatred this is inexcusable this must stop they post things on Facebook and everybody comments and they blame the president for this I blame the president it's amazing to me it's always amazing how they do that boy claims praying for black doll found hanging from Noosa Queen Village Philadelphia playground. The fewer that erupted Thursday when a black doll was found hanging from a wire with a new surround its neck in Queen Village it's a part of Philadelphia quited later in the day when 2 pre-teen boys one black and one White came forward and said they had put the doll there as prank was nothing racial about their act they said the Reverend Mark Kelly Tyler pastor of mother Beth Amy church should an interview Thursday night that the boys admitted the act to n.b.c. 10 reporter Rosemary Connors and said they thought the doll was creepy and put it up to scare people Tyler said he spoke by phone with Mayor Jim Kenney and Police Commissioner Richard Ross about the new information and said I think everybody is satisfied of course that didn't stop mayor Kenny from coming out and tweeting before he had all the facts together. Sickened by what took place today at the playground this despicable act shows how far this country has fallen when people are inspired by hateful rhetoric will do everything we can to bring those responsible to justice early in the day the police commissioner had said this absolutely was a hate crime. The director of Human Resources of Philadelphia said this was a heinous hate crime targeting the African-American community this is what happens of people rush to judgment and they say it's a hate crime and it's that larger sign of America instead of you saying this is a hate crime we've got to deal with it which by the way it's not but let's just assume they did that they say they kept it on the micro level for a moment this is a hate crime it's intolerable for our community and stead because Trump's president they say this is a crime and this is America today and this is why this is sickening this has to stop and this goes all the way up to Donald Trump and then it turns out to be a fraud they don't apologize to the president they don't apologize to the Magna hat wearing crowd they just in fact now with Jesse Smollett the actor from Empire who claims that he was called these names beat up bleached on his face a noose around his neck he's now a victim because how mentally deranged must he be to do this and the kind of pressure that's put on people in Trump's America that makes them do this so he's actually still a victim you see I guess if you believe that race is no to Kansas State University turns out to be a hoax college fics staff November of 2018. And there's another headline here another hate crime at the University of Maryland it turns out to be a hoax from Reason dot com We where of easy narratives about bias incidence we usually don't know who's behind them and when we find out they often aren't who you'd expect this is racially charged for feeding quoting a swastika in the bathroom of the University of Maryland reported as a hate crime case or solve the perpetrator was the month a Alexander an 18 year old former university employee who was black instead it was a hoax or at least an act of intimidation committed by a member of the targeted minority group it was not an act of hate crime it's the 2nd such deceptive case of the university in the past few months last October police arrested running out for the 52 year old black former employee for spray painting a swastika on campus at University of Maryland workplace grievances seem to be more important motivators of bias than racism. And. The waiter who faked a racist received the latest to use shocking claims to get Facebook of this from Fox News that Texas. The woman had said that the guy wrote we don't tip terrorists at the bottom of the receipt you know the bill the check she put on Facebook to get some Facebook love a lot of this I think goes to the victim mentality that we live in today a lot of this really is because you get a lot of attention when you're a victim if you're the victim of something you posted on social media look what they wrote on my receipt you don't approve anything if anybody says you're making it up they're Rubio immediately them they're a bigot for doubting you and you get flooded with all kinds of just you love than and they boast you up they build you up and say we'll get through this and this is wrong and this is true and it all comes back to trump right and you don't have to be right. You just have to say it you don't have to prove a damn thing hey crime at Michigan State University was actually just a missing shoe ace again Reason dot com Robbie so writing how common are bona fide bias incidents we don't know this one was a shoelace that. Was it was a new song on a doorway turned out to be nothing more than a misplaced shoelace. And the media keep saying anti-Semitism has spiked 57 percent under Trump but that's insisting it's really misleading really Anti-Defamation League report actually show that attacks decreased in 2017 from 2016. And again a lot of this now comes up to the point of a narrative that we are living in this awful awful awful place which is why the Just story much like the Covington story the Covington Catholic kids what happened in d.c. With Nathan Philips that narrative also they ran with it the media ran with it trumps America over these kids did to this poor indigenous man and as as this story all unravels they don't let it ever they don't learn from any of these things and words the media politicians they don't stop to say you know there's been like 10 of these that have been hoaxes or just wrong why don't we take a deep breath instead they just go all in do they not they go all in this is Cory Booker my senator from me great state of nature I think it's really not a great state I can it's a very expensive over it's a police state basically that way Cory Booker wants to be president and Cory Booker loves to grandstand I call him grandstand jewel he's just if it's what he does he's Spartacus he grandstands he's got his own band and right away when the just the small thing happened he took no time I mean literally no time to grandstand. Now on that one Ok See I perhaps should have said the number on that how about j s 7 Cory Booker on just a small attack Ok open up about what he's learned and the bigger message he wants the world to hear. So people need to hear the most from the story as a 1st time he's given a detailed account as I get on the wrong one of the information so there around the you know withholding told me from the 2 comes out from the record sources I'm you know in America to a bigoted and biased attacks or under a rock in a serious way we actually don't know in this country is it smart to love another Jordan or the terrorist attacks on a sweet soul or soil have been right wing or terrorist attacks or majority of them like some of this is probably were for shooting the kids. In South Carolina church were seen as attacks on people because they're different and for me going together and damn going to. See what happens there when Jesse's most sort of 1st breaks Cory Booker comes out and says we need to pass the federal anti-lynching bill when it turns out it's a hoax comes out and says well let's get all the facts together but regardless there still is still hatred everywhere and I still want to go the narrative of hate so we're still going to go with narrative All right I can't allow us to go away from the narrative even though Jesse Jesse small it might have made it up all these other people might have made it up but we still have a narrative here we have to go through and we cannot walk away from it for a 2nd now there's a lot of left wing anti israel sentiment on university campuses as the volunteers the blogger and George Mason University law professor David Bernstein has pointed out there's a lot of other issues with regards to anti-Semitism in the Democratic Party as you've seen I mean just today Louis Louis Farrakhan was saying about the congresswoman who said as you wrote it as have been times the world you know nothing to apologize for. But just the small it is true even to be a fraud a whole. He paid these brothers to go out there and beat him up and pour bleach on his face and put a noose around his neck it's all wrong but it doesn't change anything for the politicians in the media they don't ever have to say they're sorry they just get to keep coming out there and saying Well well regardless regardless regardless then they throw fake statistics that have been disputed time and again and the media lets them spew their nonsense because they also want to see the narrative for failed trumps America even though it's all a bunch of b.s. 8773813811877381311 and McCabe and Huma cave the f.b.i. It all plays together as I will explain for you which is the only for the great one he's back tomorrow night on the Mark Levin Show. 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Over IP systems for Cisco wife I and secure professional video surveillance solutions using top quality components state tell us here 35 years strong we have the experience to do it right and we would love the opportunity to help you and provide you with the right solutions give us a call and talk to day tell us corporate sales consultants today 858-571-3100 or email is that business that they tell says dot com d a t e l s y s dot com thinks they can drop one thing else picked it up all county will likely spend the rest of his life in American 1st we need to know up $760.00 to Ted Cruz suggested using chuckles money to finance the goal that's what 14000000000 dollars dollars I think it's a good idea I mean we can certainly say let's go to this bill I will build a great great wall and I will have Mexico pay for that a.t.m. 760 talk bringing you. 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Evy I am in the referral box and check out that's Legal Zoom dot com code Levin Legal Zoom or life meets legal. Systems we see you Lou. Sure. There are many ways they know. Where you. Are. On the radio. Now of course you probably had never heard of just before this I hadn't heard of this before this but we have to understand why this is so important because exposing this nonsense goes right into the heart of the narrative that trumps America is a racist hateful place and you get expose it and that's what we're doing here in the market in show Rich Zeoli in for the great one he's back tomorrow and I could not be happier I have loved being with you and I thank you for listening I truly truly do on Twitter at Rich Zeoli if you'd like to connect z.e.o. Alive but I'm a fellow even I and I can't wait to hear Mark's take on the issues that have been going on from and human cave in the f.b.i. In the coup the border wall the national emergency etc So I'm very excited for his return his triumphant return tomorrow and I thank you for listening in his absence I generally do really truly appreciate it this is a little Brian Stelter You know Brian Stelter who's very little and I assume is going to hit puberty any day now he's on c.n.n. Now to listen he's the media guy and c.n.n. Analyzing the media now listen to his dumb take on how the media handled the initial just the Smollett hate crime story activist actors Hollywood celebrities friends of small that Democratic presidential candidates they all wanted to sell they were doing the right thing saying the right thing standing up for a victim there's an inherent tension in this story between wanting and needing to believe victims and yet knowing that people take advantage of that taking advantage of the idea that it's important to believe that times and that tension has been the story for weeks there was a rush to judgment I think it was mostly in the celebrity press and among activists . And among Twitter people I think it was a really careful reporting by news organizations but it all gets lumped in together at the end of the day it all gets under the other in the minds of many people who now look at this and say what went wrong here and obviously at the end of the day what went wrong is that even they made it up and ultimately that's his responsibility now is your responsibility because you guys never asked any tough questions in the media and it's not just couldn't keep some kooks on Twitter Brian Stelter it is people like Senator Cory Booker United States senator you know I think Senator comma heris the speaker of the House of Representatives Nancy Pelosi Congresswoman Maxine Waters congresswoman eggs Alexandro case of Cortez among others and networks and this n.b.c. C.n.n. A.b.c. Robin Roberts all of them believing this don't downplay it like it's a couple of nuts on Twitter in fact this is Dan Abrams the legal guy their legal guy on a.b.c. Trying to make Robin Roberts feel better after the puffy job she gave to Jesse Smollett they wanted to give him the benefit of the doubt you don't want to go out there and publicly start questioning someone who talks about a horrific attack like this until you've got the goods and they're still being careful now but I have to say Robin even in the interview that you did you were talking about the skeptics you were talking about the people who questioned his account so it's not new this idea that there are questions you did your best drop and you did your best it's a laughable how the media falls and it's laughable how badly they fell on the McCabe story too and when we get back I'll break it down for you just as Mark would like me to I know he was always right this was always a coup against the president Rich is the only for the great one coming right back. Secretary a.s.r.s. Proposed drug pricing plan is really bad for your health yet another disturbing part was brought to my attention if you have Medicare. Part d. Under aids our plan you can be denied access to what is now a protected class of lifesaving drugs that treat serious conditions under the proposed plan if the estimated ho cell cost of any of these lifesaving drugs were doing crease Well let's say more than the rate of inflation even temporarily it would trigger a regulation that could deny access to people who need that drug the estimated cost is an arbitrary estimate of the drug manufacturers list price to host sailors and has no relationship to the price you pay for drugs after insurance discounts and other factors in short this dangerous policy could deny treatments to patients based upon a meaningless litmus test Think about it if you get sick and are in treatment you could be denied access to the drug you need to save your life get the facts go to true health care Facts dot com That's true health care Facts dot com snoring is usually a symptom of something that could be a lot more seriously path it's when you stop breathing when you're sleeping and you starve your brain of vital oxygen and it puts you at a much higher risk for heart attack and diabetes and high blood pressure stroke my dad had a stroke because of his sleep apnea and that's why I want to go get checked out and I have sleep apnea too which is why I wear this now guard every night taking no chances and my sleep apnea is gone to my stories God So my wife happy to doctor a nice Oh Dr Hediger they're wonderful Here's another patient a sharp again alert at my energy is excellent it's just a night and day difference I couldn't be happier recommending west coast sleep solutions to people to treat their snoring so if you snore if the person next to you still has a lot could be a sign of something worse so go to West Coast sleep solutions 1st consultation free a date go sleep and they'll help out with all your insurance and Medicare and all that answer all your questions 888 go sleep 88 go sleep why are you checking your phone I'm so sorry we just finished there I placed a tray for tomorrow morning wow I didn't know you did that yeah I've been taking. 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News update hours after protests erupted around the country over President drugs national emergency declaration more than a half dozens more than a dozen states have sued the trumpet ministration over it c.b.s. Is that only brand. From Chicago. To Pittsburgh this is right you know. And Denver there were protests on this Presidents Day after President Trump declared a national emergency already this is the facsimile of every single dictator that's ever existed the human history attorney and law professor Peter Shane the people who are suing they don't have to win on the question was it Ok to declare an emergency when they have to win on is whether or not once there is an emergency and the president used this military construction statute to move money around on top of $16.00 states a group of Texas lead owner says also filed a lawsuit against the emergency declaration c.b.s. News update matchplay per. Right breaks down at Sea World and stranded passengers I said the perky that's one of the stories we're following on Am 760 a rescue operation is underway a Sea World tonight where about 16 people in 5 gondolas became trapped on the bay side skyride over the waters of Mission Bay fire department officials tell News 8 high winds seem to have caused the problem and lifeguards are in position in the water below helping with the rescue the members of an ocean side family say they barely escaped to their home when an 80 foot pine tree fell onto it yesterday evening news they reports the tree came down at about 8 pm on to the house on home street this news sponsored by Father Joe's villages see an end to homelessness donate vehicles to Father Joe's villages your gifts help fund housing and health care for local families go to neighbor dot org or call 1800 homeless to donate today right now at Lindbergh Field it's mostly clear and 47 degrees am 760 k. F. And b. Talk and breaking news a.t.m. 760 car and raking news. My good being show bases got all about the drug I forgot America you could go maybe 773-8138 bodyguard. And the great one will be back tomorrow night which is the only and from our show great that you've let me hang out with you the last week or show thank you and I know Mark is very excited to come back tomorrow and I know you're excited to have him back your fellow all of the night and we are excited here Mark shake and all the stuff I will tell you. That this Andrew McCabe thing is amazing to me here's a guy trying to profit off of an attempted coup so he was the deputy director of the f.b.i. Career f.b.i. Guy and he talked about how he and Rod Rosenstein. Had got the Justice Department talking about using the 25th Amendment to the Constitution removing a sitting president he writes of book about it he goes on Scott Pelley and doesn't interview on 60 Minutes about it not afraid of you know being tried for treason he's trying to make money by selling books it's amazing to me. Now this is a little clip here where McCabe talks about a number of different things here I want to play this for you and I'm going to comment on it because this is really something you should know there was a full out attempted coup against a sitting president the United States if it failed but the brazenness of all of this is truly truly amazing as we listen to former deputy director of the f.b.i. Andrew McCabe on with Scott Pelley discussion of the 25th Amendment was simply Rod raise the issue Gus that with me wrong is right Rose I said let's just start over isn't it Rod I love this you just rot Rod raised it with me Roger Yes raised it with me like you know going to the track Friday night raised it with me and I thought yeah why not wife's out of town let's do it ride in the context of thinking about how many other cabinet officials might support such an effort. I didn't have much to contribute to be perfectly honest and that conversation so I listened to what he had to say. But to be fair it was an unbelievably stressful time I can't even describe for you how many things must have been coursing through the deputy attorney general's mind at that point so you know I don't let you go when I'm stressed I eat a lot I'm a stress senior and he's a he's a 25th Amendment guy when he's stressed out you know I mean when he stress he talks about removing a duly elected president I'd States of America don't judge him you know I'm stressed I just tend to I go for the salty snacks myself that's what I do when I'm stressed he's very stressed so obviously he's going to talk about removing the president of the United States and doing a coup de tat I mean come on don't judge the guy. It was really something that he kind of threw out in a in a very frenzied chaotic conversation about where we were and what we needed to do next what seemed to be coursing through the mind of the deputy attorney general was getting rid of the president of the United States well one way or another I can't confirm that but what I can say wait a 2nd you can't confirm that he's talking about using the 25th Amendment which literally removes the president of the United States I can't confirm that you just did confirm that like 8 seconds ago you confirmed that when you said he was going to use the 25th Amendment that's exactly what you just confirmed not even 8 seconds ago 4 seconds ago this is amazing to me that Scott Pelley does not call him out on this I can't confirm it he's only talking about using the amendment of the Constitution that actually removes the president of the United States from the presidency but I can't confirm if you actually want to remove him from the presidency Wyatt's I can't confirm that. But I can sorry it is the deputy attorney general was definitely very concerned about the president about his capacity and about his intent at that point in time how did he bring up the idea of the 25th Amendment to you. Honestly I don't remember the ending that you know it happens I would remember that I mean it's just it's a minor thing you know bringing up the 25th Amendment getting the cabinet to meet with the vice president and vote to remove the sitting president of the United States and how am I going to remember something like that I get a lot of my mind Scott how could I even that's just one of those things he mentioned in passing how please you believe that this guy is amazing to me he's acting like it's just so nonchalant that Rod Rod his boss is just mentioning the 25th Amendment of the Constitution I don't I honestly I don't remember I really should. Much go out on a busy day what can I say Scott amazing he it was just another kind of topic that he jumped to in the midst of a wide ranging conversation seriously of just another topic even Scott Kelly is taken aback by about capital he wants so badly for McCain to be right even he's shocked by this claim that it's just another topic No Seriously Scott it's true we're all trying to figure out what's going to happen on this season a game of thrones it's the last one I mean Rod and I were talking about whether or not the Kito diet works per lot about it not sure he's a real big carb guy so we're I mean yeah the 25th Amendment came up lot of this question a lot of topics lot of topics you can understand even Scott Pelley is calling b.s. On this bad to me Scott Pelley calling b.s. On and you McKay going really just a lot of topics really come up just another topic. Did you count see him on that I didn't I mean he was discussing other cabinet members and whether or not people would support such an idea whether or not other cabinet members would shared his belief that the president was. Was really concerning was concerning right at that time Rosenstein was actually openly talking about whether there was a majority of the cabinet who would vote to remove the president that's correct. Counting votes counting votes for possible voters they had a chart and a chart you know with names on it you know Rick Perry Yes no they had a chart with names maybe a column of columns of cabinet members in the president of the United States can let's understand what this is now the president of the United States appoints members of the cabinet they serve the president the Department of Justice has nothing to do with this and here's the f.b.i. The former director of the f.b.i. And the Department of Justice guy talking about having the cabinet vote to remove the president of the United States and they're sitting there cavalierly going yeah no where count heads may list columns you know might like it see March Madness poll like the March Madness pool you know who's in who's not in just the office pool that's all just which cabinet members are going to go hey is that Kentucky going all the way this year you know who's got the box for that this year that's all that's all it was no big deal no big thing these guys should have nothing to do with this here's a test f.b.i. Are you going after John Dillon sure or Al Capone a bootleg or a gangster a giant drug dealer a terrorist yes then you're doing your job if you're talking about the 25th Amendment and the president's cabinet you're not doing your job there is nothing in the f.b.i. The Department of Justice that says you get to invoke the 25th Amendment to the constitution nothing and you see Scott Pelley should stop him right there and ask him that question and say what why would it be of the purview of the f.b.i. And the Department of Justice to reach out to the president's cabinet that's not your job and it's not what the 25th member of the Constitution is there for it's there for the president is sick it's there for presidents in a coma it's there if the president is mentally incapacitated and can't do his job anymore because he's lost it never did. With crimes that seem Pietschmann clause of the Constitution that's up to Congress so what gives you the right to reach out to the cabinet anyway in the 1st place what makes you think this is Ok your job to go after guys with Tommy guns That's the F.B.I.'s job not to go after the president's cabinet in terms of rounding up them for votes against the president somehow he does not answer any of these questions he's just amazed as I am that they have a flip chart of all the cabinet members and then there are counting heads for a vote on invoking an amendment to the Constitution which by the way has never been used before to remove a sitting president from office and Scott Pelley Just go again oh well that's all well you can't yeah maybe is there like an app even a cabinet you keep track of a cabinet of 25th Amendment app you can use who's with use against you just to make your job easier as you're doing your coup d'etat if you do a coup d'etat at least you might as well use the most modern technology available this is the biggest softball interview I think I've ever heard in my life did he assign specific groups a specific group or not that I recall if you're sitting in this meeting at the Justice Department talking about removing the president of the United States you were thinking of what how did I get here confronting these founding the legal issues of such immense importance not just to the f.b.i. But to the entire country it was. There was disorienting I'm just oriented from that interview on about you but I'm completely disoriented here you have a guy sitting there on national television discussing an attempted coup d'etat against the president of the United States of America and he's so brazen about it he's trying to sell a book he's not worried about not getting caught but you would think in reality all the guys who are part of the crew would shred every document would hide any trace of them and just disappear go to Key West and open a bar and pray they don't find you or hell even leave the country and pray they don't find you instead this swamp is so brazen they write a book about it and he sits there with Scott Pelley And he talks about it on national t.v. . And because the media is so in on and secretly rooting for them he winds up just sitting there going just so cavalierly talking about how they were openly discussing removing the president of the United States and key details that really somebody should remember and should ask which cabinet members when when you talk to them how did you bring it up how was it how do you mention something like that to a member of the cabinet how does that conversation go all these other things and ultimately what was the motivation for this other than you don't like him and you don't like what he said about your wife who ran for office in Virginia and got all kinds of Democrat money what was the motivation for this Mr McCabe He talks about he said this earlier to he said you know I was afraid the investigation was just going to disappear poof disappear and the question I asked earlier is does that routinely happen bad investigations just literally just appear files are gone like they never existed nobody's there it's all gone does that routinely happen if it doesn't happen then you're creating hysteria just to push a narrative so that you can justify going after somebody. Without any evidence without any evidence Take a listen to what I mean by that I was very concerned that I was able to put the Russia case on absolutely solid ground in an indelible fashion that where I removed quickly or reassigned or fired that the case could not be closed or vanish in the night without a trace I wanted to make sure that our case was on solid ground and if somebody came in behind me and closed it tried to walk away from it they would not be able to do that without creating a record of why they made that decision a record because it might vanish in the night the case mages vanish in the night poof it's gone but it never existed they are like Batman because vanishes in the night where you go just he was here a minute ago I watch a lot of I watch a lot of superhero stuff I have a 4 year old so I understand my references are going to be anyway does that routinely happen Mr McCabe were these investigations vanish in the night and if not the hysteria that you're selling here is that just to justify an investigation without any evidence whatsoever he if you had evidence you wouldn't have to worry about an investigation disappearing right because you had evidence of something but didn't have any evidence and you had to keep going and going and going and then you say well I got to keep going because I'm worried the investigation might disappear but you have no evidence that becomes your shoes to keep investigating that means you're violating somebody's civil liberties. This is a dangerous place in America where a failed coup d'etat against the president of the United States so brazenly talked about and now they're trying to profit off of it by the way and the media of course does not do its job as much as Scott Pelley has a nice voice and ask the real questions here the real questions which need to be asked including the fact of how can you just be so brazen about removing a duly elected president of the United States that you act like you're just talking about what do you we can play. Hands are what how do you make a nice casserole How do you use that instant pop that everybody's talking about so brazen so troubling this is truly what a police state is make no mistake the Mark Levin Show the great one back with you tomorrow night I'm Rich Zeoli in for Mark and we are coming right back. 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Like what you hear so far no. More about clothing going to Islam site smugglers enjoy guns. And of course the question becomes what happens to all these people that orchestrated this coup against a president of the United States Welcome back Mark Levin Show. Oh good news Marc is back tomorrow night the great one back with you tomorrow night as I say thank you for letting me fill in for you for marker these past so in a week or so thank you for that very much appreciate it Rich Zeoli on Twitter at Rich Zeoli love to connect with you the fact is that there was a failed coup against a sitting president the media so just that you know complete softballs against this with McCabe complete softballs and at the heart of this is a troubling troubling revelation we're living in a police state when the federal government's law enforcement division is engaged in politics why are people on the left not of afraid of this why are people not concerned about this I've heard a lot about this with regard to the president's national emergency declaration that well you know if he does this and the left going to do this to legit point for discussion right. Have you heard anybody on the left say that if the f.b.i. Can go after a Republican president it can go after a Democrat president and warn us about that have you heard that I have not I've heard people say if Donald Trump declares an emergency on the border then the Democrats will declare an emergency on climate change it's a very valid point that should be discussed and we discuss it have you heard a single Democrat or someone in the media say you know if the f.b.i. And the Department of Justice can orchestrate a coup and try to invoke the 25th Amendment against a Republican president you don't like couldn't they do that against a Democrat president you do like Shouldn't all these people be exposed shouldn't all of this be exposed and shouldn't these people be I don't know maybe prosecuted for their actions so this never happens again in America so that we understand this is not how it works in this country that our government's police do not get to decide who becomes president and who gets to stay as president that's not how it works in our republic that's how it works in banana republics it's how it works in 3rd world countries it is not how it works here this is not the Stasi this is not Russia this is not Venezuela Cuba China and if you go on and on 08 States of America people pick the president if the f.b.i. Like doesn't like it I could give a damn if it is part of Justice doesn't like it who the hell cares they don't get to sit around and orchestrate a coup they don't get to sit around and use the 25th Amendment they try to take out a president they don't like that's not how it works and the left should wake up to that fact as you know what as you're talking about precedents with national emergencies Here's a precedent for you there might be a Democrat president the future and the f.b.i. May just not like that Democrat president the future just food for thought Hey thanks so much for letting me hang out with you I really appreciate it thank you for listening thank you so much on Twitter at Rich Zeoli r.c.h. Z e o. Mark Levin the Great One himself back with you tomorrow night make sure you listen thanks. 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BBC Radio Scotland MW-20181230-060000

You know Old Firm games they ran it's one nil when I was at I brought an Edinburgh 1872 cup the defeat to Glasgow Warriors 168 at Scotstoun to retain the title to the weather no Clady this morning with the rain affecting movie studios for a time particularly in the far north that rain shoots clear though to leave a dry afternoon in the east but house with the odd bright spell developing sting Cloete and dump in the West I'm afraid mild again with highs of 11 or 12 degrees Celsius and that's B.B.C. Radio Scotland news sports and weather. We sang stuff programme Tuol. It's. We are in means of concluding in Thailand and I was born in Huntly and who did you 1st get into traditional music well. I was plainly for that school but it was classical and I was nearly enough I will without So I went to the street. Then played with them for a long way years and through the saddle and went to festivals and I heard folks saying and put in a hand so it was really through that got a key festival and stuff and. And was already being female I. Plays a piano she used to play in dance bands and play the organ in a kayak and Huntley So there was a music can hope Minnie's and family pair is no one can get on he would be in a piano not as hard for sex to our state and what are saying we had our family songbook that mump an education. And the language you grew up speaking my mum's born and I saw it was a daughter. Has been up here since seventy's so he's a past shadow duck really. But my mom's side of the family just don't like the time my family were born and brought up in the deal than dino health and what their lives in the factories but I think as a Sunday will you know which means some of the fate of the ferry I've been interested in just finding it but what happens to be really under my feet are just knew for a long time it was Angus it was for for such so I'm just interested in what happens to be whatever commiserate and Bertie ferry and sure Donaldson entitling via Huntley some stuff Figgy deferent it's a school talent but be 3 our passion for the local son tradition whether order will or plant to put its books away is the longest lived abroad sate publishers in Scotland broadsides words one sided sung slips Miss Lee you could buy in for a penny you'd sometimes see Huck of selling them it fears in the lake but the poets books where are we short and the old overcoat and and the and it was written for a bit 60 years closed in the 1940 S. And latterly it was owned by. Leighton McCartney he would publish one of the hard place and he would collect all songs and publish them and hundreds of thousands and many ways he was single handedly responsible for his report your eyes and some old songs for that reason were no quite sure who much of the real tradition is truly Wardle or at home and in the play it has with text and it's late clear that's maybe half and half Chris was lucky to get walk on the custard she's to put undo his archive deny dark that brutal men decode Doc we sunk specie neighborhood when I started Rican 3 result tapes offend some amazing things that NE idea when there there was in was sung by a chap great William Taylor what was a done deal him and eventually it dawned on me that it was a both Eboli to fit what is new Done DE but used to be part of real anger 70 years ago it's talking. 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Caressed his new Jane Doppies plein Steve button to get into the scales and God of the B.M.'s back pain or forgotten him in a bit 20122030 I started talkin records back to a blue to where the bins here folk for the tune that been recorded soon for a simple thing to do but actually the process had been for the B. And was a revelation because the been said the idea was sung a bit but in this particular song was fairway Mabel Skelton and she was the a lame folk that worked in the mills and up booth it was no juveniles are not proof it was flux mills there was a police car the broth that Mel again speckle back in the other billions and of the in the tin cans for AS and who is the reaction. Like ducks to what I mean it was just incredible the thing about the hottest song about the 2 you can There must be a big 3 or 400 bins in a booth in the US. Was. Was. I. Was. Feared proof to decide what I spot be sure Donaldson and that mine Paul Anderson you know the Miskin speckle federal US and the North East a combination I sang lead and music I could not resist spirit in a bit but I don't can focus on. Collection a collection 8 volumes A songs over 3000 songs collected in the northeast by government and James Bruce Duncan a minister and a schoolteacher just a for the 1st world war the went in the country and recorded them and of course at the time it was awed by Hahn so noble Huntley was you know Isaac troops songs Isaac troop was one of the 3 but of ours for I thin Wales that contributed a lot of songs to the conflicts on collection. Like a day. Like getting. I'm getting them wrong like. I come across the scene of course it just kind of stuck me in the Huntley and it did they had to let But for now they had the words it just made sense to put it to the fiddle to tell us but I'm going to it's it's in your English iconic star speech so I can find it was about and talk alarms on the box of the speed and the date I suspect is probably 16 on the day it just feels like it's going to the law and skip at Cisco on mystical Island scorch car and if you get played right that just gets a hold off for myself but the excitement. Was there when we did Peter was to play it as I say it's actually quite 30 to play it there really poignant but it was all fine and the belly was like God high over me all boys and I was women Robert de St CD players to space where but that Garnet is like vocal cocked up the score scale up to it that's different Why give the players to space with a deal and it's got to fail in the belly up and can it does the same like it's going to be who's ever been in court are you going to mandolin you sick it seems completely different funnily enough of I can remember because the robot feather Gessen who reels against the influence the music in him but in the middle of the 1000 Cinci he uses total agreement Mozart national spirit. A Polish Italian music fiddlers you have been is a pimp of things and the only A federal states that Bonny's By A Lake County and makes the quarrel north for the piano is makes. Your sale stick. Tradition and who important is the school's language and listen to the battle which to me personally I think got optionally politely and done 20 and to me a walk which is it's important for it to mean a distinctive and caption the essence to a place I mean as new some of the I think of it I just spoke of I a speck in us on the way a sign you can it just comes not set a drop that only that change your spectral performance whether it's America or I mean you have to be on the stoop to sell a but for fame to be suspect clearly folk can follow you at the last one and hope lives like a Bob shop and a pharmacy fit again was in Egypt the daughter of a dog that was cut it was for Egypt and you had best get it daughter cocks at it committed on acquires all the time and I can mine B.N. And a lot of the young limbs and points are coming to pubs and those I said. And he would I say your tables are for food neophyte ashes I think this is getting the youngsters just loved him because he has spoken in their language in the language who money. Kim that yet peasant Pete the patented looney patented dysphonia Yet days again I know why I took it did would be a see written that if you have to get paid him P. Then yes I am is the expression think it's simply not this disclaimer I like it and I have 2 feet so they got to know why and for people because uncle he was often upset he had to see a surgeon might have gotten 2 feet and must treat me differently the. Way that the pontiff. It's just that we nonsense song I suppose you could kind of think it was Scott's my music cannot have led to the Golic personal and I we but to it goes. Further I was a little we really need I was I. Was certain my Grammys when to sell dance with these would have been. Along came a loss A.M.T. Of me had guys that would never let us score learn but your book that we must meet is the market through the Wendy and I'm going to don't buy that nice and all never thought I am back at the law that dog's tail dog I want to double counted up but it's plenty on a stand. Up the did you get the balls I am. When I was a boy I can remain I thought was 78 out of the other by simply fact that I bet I was one of them and an old boy unicorn a few me when he saw me yes to see one week a while he kept me company of the right. The other 20 or peace Queens and the sang stuff what beat study in school music at the Royal can sever twat and place go I want to fight also he'll speak Huntley but bust Christie scored the Bucky sing and. Call Kate. Did Do not sure I thought he I do so. B. Sing Clayson try to be you find I can shiver. I felt awful lot further notice a new way to Clay's one of the year of the time I had worn the only thing on this So 6 it was just show so I dressed myself up at it but I reserve. Some talking of the buck through the fungal the guy yells hears your claims we go Globe and go GA get guy so or can. Thaw though we meant for. Me Sometimes I think the. Chill that. But I just get another shrunk and when I left my. Combs. Is a happy ending to the US too fortunately no noise lost these what are these plays I'm . In. Very much a fresh may sleep fresh air I finish a stiff and I stay so. Darned fisherman my mother say I get it on me she was fair men Additionally they in my mother's fair there used to be a fisherman and now so quite used to the man going to the time or to see once interviewed women V C one of them come and we are pleased when we're gotten here one of the families is the corporal one of them said We used to he seems to flick a while we go and that payment for that could be made before school. We used to he didn't know he but he plays if people say we used to he in a pickle seems to flick of wire the games we used to preserve a few stories to play to the seagulls and. Even new tween us even just for you Huntley I mean Bucky there's the odds light wired to the even we would see that something says well this is the 2nd it was some really wild stuff I'm writing and you see Fred I sometimes you can't even translate that because you'd like to see me so I see your face and a half. Like you do. As a serious face for the half charged up the only but the one a butat least for us my favorite in the phrases is you to cite. That was just something you said of a tie you. To the extent that you shortened it and I remember peed in a pub one of the 1st months I was doing it and some do you want to talk. Just toss it aside you can like off does that mean I hopes last for the fisherman. And the boat began to sink obviously he would chuck it I had to head any wheat to try and keep the ball above the wire for as long as possible in the hope of being saved and then I lost that just taped you would throw your ties to get another boat through thought if you decide even for another 2 or 3 seconds to keep it he did of a what are so that's obviously years ended up meaning is that it is. All hopes lost. QUESTION So it's basically with the games of what he. Had. Any chance of coming. Up with the thought is it a state. Of the business where you the northeast the stole fortune with school sign is the tradition of the both the ballance for the policeman the book in the Michael fer. Sure to donate something and they want to fight. To the. Well maybe some of the balancing here ones that were on a fair amount of time by folks that were working on a farm and then in 17 and a melancholy life and then there's a corn Custer's as we'll but this song is a genuine people and my. Grandfather was. Broughton's farm and Gardens is a furnace mentioned in. Just near Huntley and that was in my family for quite a few years and. This is probably one of my favorite people it's in its. 3rd life and I think it's the fact that you CAN I GET SO deal. With you could tell you what. They're like to get. A different kind of both a song so you've got love songs I mean not say going to be so much of a a bit but the hardships of the work and life you can that you could. Compute it employer that much because of course you got paid at the end month fee so if you stick to a line you do know it you wouldn't get your fee so I want to get in the songs anonymously a bit the places and the family and that's why it gets played C. On the. West. But we want to. York that. So be in for Huntley a lot of songs and a lot of. Area even the most famous in the Scots today and especially in the both about to should be drum Delpy which is just a couple of miles outside Huntley So being born and brought up in Huntley It was a dark can every time we went up in a 6 towards And there's a signpost to John Gregg and Duncan recorded 21 versions of the song its new found on AMY Our. Work and Family think the. And to hold it because it just was bison on it for a while and. So it's a bit soggy in the biggest fam in the northeast. So dumbed down again really is just a song about everyday life at the fair at 5 o'clock with quite clear eyes and honey doing the stairs there to corner horses and likewise struck in their hair sign after work on Hoffa nudity the catchy goes it's there to get our breakfast which generally is Bruce So it's really plain spec and there's Nina and. That's it's just . It's all life in the not exactly it. So if they're. Going. On all the. Well Common to be in the sun thoughts but I'd like to be we have huge Godin fever that's the kind of the beauty school it sounds and the people and of the songs for us that sing them he. Will talk e pocket. Sometimes about this huge inner conflict on spec and the fact that this is supposed to be different supposed to be just like Alex forced to be a different language when I was disco we were given lessons on speak and read in under 8 an indoor tick even the twit spiral doll was read to us and bought it which was amazing the Egypt's. Gardens and Bucky doesn't Huntly we didn't and it's marketed at the billions of court that opportunity God if somebody pushed Scott singing a wee bit me EVERY me is a B. They never know I might be years ahead I am new for me give me volatile that's really what it did for me I do member Mick in the corner decision to change the singing in English to sing in scores and it was totally a liberty but not just for a personal level it for me it was almost like my whole world. That Vollard these Markel to a volatile East Fork it validates everything that we had a big and really wanting to sing in school and I could never get back to singing in English I just couldn't do it because it doesn't raise any. Join Morton for the hip . Hop. High. Yesterday. Probably my favorite site is yesterday night the plane went to meet some ailing police and I think we can the story behind it then it makes me a sense because he had an affair when he was in the free suite on Pop cubes of Bob me to think of the blue clue so she had to be able to bottoms and deed without lying if the job and Gene are both had to be and so there was bombs re his illegitimate child and with us out of jail in fact Gina. But in that we name a lock if the living sue on Flossie was worked up it becomes easy and when and it always rains or didn't leave was in one piece like and Bones was in place thus but on populates that's fun and there's these wife as a way for you must have been thinking about me you say something so beautiful it was a published at the time I'm no shit about hives you see made up you may have but I can't she probably would know for me but even still quite heart rending to me that you did and so get a cesspit on and for me as male and call it because there's some deep deep for me last little than love so the pain away to me then becomes instrumental in the sighing because the pain to wane is some set in the pub East thinking back to what's to stop them and between vs these time can this pain away and just feel an obsolete dreadful way done becoming to be some amazing amazing stuff the thing about being the melodies excludes. Just up to me and so the bottom. The bikes a banner so Nitish melody. And finally the school song has become an top national anthem well love for the present line and for the past I'm belonging to Scotland Robin Stapleton people any. Good or not that buttons was a very big and fluent in that was probably for me the root and to sing in school but it would be real for me to hear I got the SO song and I got a lovely Irish dialect and that for me was something that I knew was going to have to be my way a saying in so that it could be true to my own roots but Barnes if vast collations of barn songs and the number of burns I learned growing up in the area gave me license to express myself and it's got language for the 1st time it was the to 7 I started singing in these competitions and I really don't have. And I kept on doing it a lovely Arnon alongside edge and longer version but I think that went to a very beautiful we twat here in a bit to please and Peter Gammons fine but we've wondered when he so really think it's an outlying same we 2 all he peed in the barn actually morning and Son Till died but the Caesar Tina sprayed théodore in our legs and. There were as a. Trustee he. Gave her. Product . Was. Far larger our. Car or. The. Car our lawn. Bar or lower our. Marginal fired her. Own. Horn. Good morning and welcome to new every Sunday from Saki and calls not an parish out here in the north side of our I am the minister of this Church of Scotland parish from fear we look out to the local hills the healthy it's on our north and across the force to our size. Earl services this week and next to the king next week for the perfectly Sunday the 1st Sunday of the New Year we will be looking forward this week we will look back I hope you had a happy Christmas wherever you spent it and west you spent it I hope you have had time to pause and to deflate and the meaning whatever you believe to help let us start with the engine clear from air from a city on in the winter when trees or beer you give us the most succulent spiritual fruit in the frost when the earth is bad and you bring new hope to our soul. In December when seeds are hidden in the soil the stuff of life springs forth from the virgin womb. Was for was a was was. Was was was not is was handsome hunting was sleaziest me. Was saying was. Was. Was was slow I. Was his own was was have a was was on her face. Was saying how lucky. I am Grace was was the week on the and the. Was was a was the was the was saying hello to the release the it was. Common Era queen and king when men and men of every age unite to praise the Lord to let ski. The year prepares to turn gracious God the days begin to lengthen just enough for us to know that the sun has not gone from eyes that was the birth of the Son of Man darkness yet again has not had victory we are grateful for the days of celebration thankful for the family and friends with whom we have thrown glove and even those for whom this season is one to be endured rather than enjoyed me see change coming as really back as we take stock re sank you for that in you'll often hear from us that our God is merciful and tender he will cause the bright dawn our salvation to rise and rise and to shine from heaven on all those who live in the dark shadow that our steps can be guided into the path of peace I mean and all Testament reading this morning is a familiar one to those of a certain age even if they have never picked up a Bible to everything Turn Turn Turn. There is a season under time for every purpose under heaven before we enjoy the cattle joy to the good old God's purpose for this season let's hear some very says from Ecclesiastes Chapter 3 everything that happens in this world happens at the time God chooses he said through charm for birth and the trying for a day the time for planting and the time for putting the time for clean and the time for healing the time for tearing down and the time for building. He sets the tone for solder and the time for joy the time of mourning and the time for dancing the time for making love on the tongue for not me heal the time for kissing and the time for not kissing he set the time for finding the time for losing the time for saving up a time for throwing away the time for taping at the time for mending the time for silence and the time for talk he sets the time for love from the time for hate the time for war and the time for peace he has set the right time for everything he has given us a desire to know the future but never gives us the satisfaction of fully understanding what he tells. Me I eat. The ear . Oh it'll lead. You know you. Eat Oh ye . Laying low end length. Illegibility us a fair all Testament treating as a pain trusting that whatever God is I have to say he knows what he is doing and New Testament reading from the pick up have a lesion is apparently detail of God's final purpose then you haven't and they knew where then I saw and you have now under new earth the 1st half and the 1st disappeared and to see even ish and I saw the holy city the New Jerusalem coming down our of heaven from God prepared and ready like the bride gress to meet her husband I heard a loud voice speaking from the throne now God's home is with people he will live with them and they shall be his people God himself will be with them and he will be their god. Wipe away all tears from their eyes there will be no more death nor more grief or crying of pain the old things have disappears then the one who sits on the throne said I've now I me all things a new. He also said to me white because the words are true and can be trusted and he said it is down I the 1st and the Last the Beginning and the end to anyone who is the city I will give the right to drink from the spring of the Warhol of life Armin my computer screen saver kinetics directly to the fold or where my pictures are stored and often times when I set deign to work I find 10 or 20 minutes has passed with me what limit is changing in front of me and I have got no work done because as soon as I touch them and use this screen saver stops and the unforgiving schedule and email program stacked up and a blank appears under noise pictures I see people in their time some I still miss keenly some I am privileged to watch. Some with whom I have lost contact some faces in the trade I can barely remember at all some I am no longer in touch with and did miss their contact I'm not sure that I've got any more than a dozen pictures in all of my mother and father both of whom died when I was wrong before the digital camera age I've got a couple of dozens of pictures on my phone from the last month alone every morning when I sit down at my computer I.C.'s not sure of my past. The Roman god Janus from which the month journey to get its name is always depicted as a head was faeces looking in opposite directions he was the god of beginnings Gates transitions Time passages and in Dane's there is at and logic to this balance we need the perspective to be balanced those who cling only to the past with an astrologer and a longing and resist all teenage will were there and perish who was who have no patience with tradition convention custom or culture may want to place on to a brave new future but simply don't understand the people the want to clear with them we all stand on the edge of time and when they really look forward our back defined. As religious people can appear to seders to be people who are obsessively looking back hanging on to and Mordred model called it a scientifically disproved worldview or to a supernatural safety blanket to people a feat However that does sane starved Christians believe in a future top Thy kingdom come and that is not the way the kingdom of heaven to fit to be who one deed to call that is the hope that by living according to the teachings of Christ we can usher in his kingdom here and know if you actually bother to be taught Jesus has to see about the Kingdom of Heaven paralegal Cindy Angel choirs do not feel. Love. Compassion giddy forgiveness inclusion those are the things which the kingdom of heaven seeks to establish to be to quote the mortal of fatality Christian need of people who believe in life before day if we stand on the edge of time and look back it is not with nostalgia and long and as much as anything it is with guilt under determination not to turn the clock back to every season turn there is a time for every purpose under heaven but times change and purposes change I saw a new heaven under a new air the 1st heaven and the 1st there had disappeared the final book of the Bible the Book of Revelation is like the 1st it is a quick tick interpretation a search for understanding of purpose not mechanics God says I am the Alpha and the Omega the Beginning and the end but in the first 6 book he was in our garden at the end he is in a city looking back is not an exercise of longing if we are honest much of the past accuses us we have this year remember the Armistice of 1918 that may many accuses us the 1st A great industrial war the United Kingdom still generates billions of pounds in arms treaty deals are we truly have peace when we deal day. There are no red poppies and silent vigils in Yemen for 19. If a member ends is nothing but on adding those whose names are chiseled on the old Memorial Stornes then too many new Cleaves will continue to be needed this year we celebrated this until a some women getting the vote in Britain it was a start rather than anything like the end of the process but a good start to question. This year was also the year of the ME to hash tag we remembered the 50 years and see assassination of Martin Luther King and Robert Kennedy in a year from the American politics seem to deepen and its divisions 2018 mark 20 years since the good Fraidy agreement we thought the deal was done and dusted for most of the 2nd task of this year it has been in plea the Christmas story is very much a boat for filling past promises and Matthew's gospel that is explicit It starts with the family tree of Jesus from Abraham to do so who married merely the mother of Jesus after that practically everything that happens is referenced back to one prophecy or other the virgin birth the fact that it should be and Bethlehem the slaughter of the innocents the escape to Egypt or for film and of past prophecy Luke's Gospel is perhaps a little more subtle you don't get the family tree until Chapter 3 although he takes it all that we back to Adam. But they could a song sung by the figures and mix a kind like Zacharias prophecy and simians nunc dimittis Lord and they let die sarvant depart in peace and also all of the fulfillment of God's promise I'm none more so than MITI song the Magnificat. Was. The fulfillment of progress we were told in the past this fear Tappan and know it as happening but the real purpose of Matthew and Luke is to see look for Happens name sed looking back as a we of understanding the present and unlocking the future and that of course is the point when really if you are passionate yet as at this time we usually do remember the significant ties in those we do not dwell on the passing of those may have loved in order to keep earthly but because we have loved them and that love is part of who we are when we remember happy days the days of celebration and party of long somebody evenings and good company they continued us through the dark winter nights I can sit and watch my past pass before my eyes on the computer screen I can sit here on the edge of time looking backwards for a while but I can know if the ear. And sooner or later I touched the mice and returned to the and I thank God for the vet I was for a change has placed me and for the future of quit T. Has assured me I thank God for the times I'm warmed and times I danced the times I mended and the times I see. The times I loved and the times I was angry and then after Thanksgiving I stir myself into action quick to my eyes and start a new T.V. . Was the That another really old cattle we have John Mason to thank for it he was a very distinguished 1900 st the Anglican church men who translated many instant and medieval hymns he also wrote the ever popular Good King Wenceslas the editor not him and Morten contained 58 of has translated terms to me cendol to fashion to as No but his reflection on the sacred things of the past I've packed off our own going celebration and worship letters pre God has given us so much we thank you for the gift of flexion we thank you that in all. In our shared traditions in our collective experience we can find comfort and consolation and drawstring and purpose from them guide dies and guard us because there are times when we have field keep our eyes from further for only keep asking me oh we're a hard one for you to. Keep as watchful and the WE'RE of the present injustice and Prejudice prompted us to prophesy so that we can call out to the leaders opinion makers people of power and influence we pray for those who have had no cause to celebrate those who live in areas of conflict those who are themselves disturbed those for whom this has been a season of hate and loss through. Those higher burdened by their past and cannot see a hopeful future all these peers bring together in the Premier you taught us seeing . Our Father who art in heaven hallowed be thy name thy kingdom come thy will be done on air as a citizen heaven give us this day our daily bread and forgive us our debts as we forgive our debtors and he does not into temptation but deliver us from evil for a sign is a kingdom the power and the glory for ever and ever amen because of us another great cattle tucked out a tune but Nessun child in a manger. A Me the mother in law of God The drawing of the angels the gladness of the shepherds the worship of the wise man and peace of the Christ child to be yours be years this Christmas I mean that was new every Sunday from so he and Coles Norton parish church service was led by the Reverend Mark Shuttleworth are 92 to 95 F.M. It won a medium wave and digital radio this is B.B.C. Radio Scotland I grew up surrounded by music on the North Yorkshire more was open a singer and photo player Eliza coffee goes by 200 S. . I was brought up in a family that taught me about music being passed from generation to generation Join the live chat to discover the impact the Scottish folk scene hide on her and her family's own musical experience we sang in Edinburgh only Sonny in the big the best place that we sang listen up again and to look at how to dish no music in Scotland has evolved and this is a really important moment he said to see the rise of young musicians unbroken line company from 8 pm on B.B.C. Radio Scotland catch up on a feast of festive programmes from B.B.C. Radio Scotland on B.B.C. Signs. On Digital Radio 9295 F.M. Economy dealing with B.B.C. Radio start. With the news that 7 o'clock am and a mid to low the home secretary Sajid Javid is due back in the U.K. Today after cutting short his holiday to deal with the rising number of migrants crossing the Channel in small boats Mr Javid is coming under increasing pressure to take tougher action on the issue but he's insisted there is no single easy answer people from the world of entertainment are remembering the comedy actress Dame June Whitfield who died yesterday at the age of 93 join a lovely one of her costars in the absolutely fabulous series says she'll never forget her sensational talent shows producer Jon Plowman says Dame June was a finite trysts she absolutely knew how to do comedy she knew what made comedy work and you know you pause in the right line on the right and it gets so big and if you did it another way it wouldn't get quite so she was a wonderful woman sales of Scotch whiskey would be boosted if the U.K. Joined a trans pacific trade agreement according to international trade secretary Liam Fox the partnership which comes into effect today brings together 11 countries Mr Fox says exports of whisky to those countries were worth 850000000 pounds last year Edinburgh's when he celebrations will get underway this evening a torchlight procession will wind its way through the capital but forecasters are warning those taking parts might need an umbrella tens of thousands of people are expected to join the parade along the Royal Mile disport a 65 year old man has been arrested over alleged racial abuse of Hearts player kimono during yesterday's Edinburgh derby a total of 7 arrests were made including 2 people over an attack on police officers before the game in which hearts defeated Hibs one nil Rangers have moved level in points with Celtic at the top of the Premiership half that inflicting Brendan Rodgers 1st defeat in 13 Old Firm games they won one nil at Ibaraki and Edinburgh lifted the 872 Cup They defeated Glasgow Warriors 168 at Scotstoun to retain the title night to the outdoor activities forecast starting with the detail.

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a taboo as memory Raindrops Keep Falling on your head and you can expect that to happen this afternoon in the city of the forecast is for it some rain and scattered showers throughout the afternoon will have a I have about 60 degrees today. And they. Have been to see. That. Primarily the day. Before. And to see the best in the. Second batch the heavy Elvish winter action is here Gabby Jacobson was an r.n. So Aragon Batterham San Francisco and the school gov Milpitas among the winners will join the dogs from k y l there's a parent this around the baby lamb there's a great. I'm I'm. The mom. I'm. Glad I'm. Francisco Larry Brown now reports than you already did a figure from the American underworld is not welcome to take up residence in Israel and Meyer Lansky is in the Jewish state on a tourist visa and an official in Jerusalem announced this morning the law returned giving most use on a manic right to live in Israel does not apply to persons with criminal backgrounds they also don't seem to welcome members of the Mafia in Israel at this time General Motors that the United Auto Workers announced today a settlement of their long strike but that doesn't mean the production of Fremont and other such assembly plants will resume immediately as Leonard Wood cock president of the u.a.w. Put it. Understood the union won such a key demand as a return to have limited wages just months in line with increases in the cost of living another key provision is retirement at $500.00 a month for workers with 30 years service eventually at age 55 San Francisco police busted a man they call a major drug supplier throughout the city Christopher McDougall allegedly had 52000 and left the tablets on him when federal and local Markel agents grabbed him outside a Safeway store on Moreno Boulevard then are set arranged to make a buy from the 25 year old suspect of. $50000.00 they claim that as I said clients included most of the show biz people in the San Francisco area known to be regular users Uncle Sam's coming up with a new breakfast roll for the kiddies the new and rich stroll would replay right now as far south as San Francisco along the California coast and over the mountains of Shasta and ready the Bay Area will get more of that rain by this afternoon and the snow level in the Sierra probably will drop to 4000 feet by tonight. It's $931.00. There they are not that there are several of them are here because you more well I just asked her what of Northern California is full factory authorized Toyota centers Toyota Center is located on the Burlingame San Mateo line Toyota Center fully factory authorized Toyota Center has all models Toyota Saturn has all colors Toyota Center can give you more in trade for your old car Toyota Center has factory parts Toyota Center has factory trained mechanics they know the Toyota inside and out Toyota Center extends an invitation to you to visit their full factory authorized showrooms Toyota Center is just a few blocks off the Beijing or from San Jose take the peninsular Avenue exit from San Francisco take the popular exit Toyota Center is on the south and the Burlingame's auto row stop looking your Toyota is here Toyota Center open every night and all day Sunday there's not a used to call the Armistice Day Then they changed it to Veterans Day And now they're even changing the date this is the last time the Veteran's Day will fall on November 11th beginning in 1981 a holiday will be observed on the 4th Monday in October that day doesn't have any historical thing in significance at all but it will make it possible for all government employees and school kids to get a 3 day weekend Russia launched another of its unmanned cosmos research satellites they had reported that its latest moon rocket unmanned balloon a 70. He has been functioning normally sentence launch yesterday observers believe that Luna 17 is supposed to follow the lead of Luna 16 and bring back some moon rocks contrary to the Joyce news from the topless part of town yesterday that the biggest a bust of them all Avon Donji was not going to be kicked out of the country the San Francisco director of Immigration has a different story he says that the queen of the topless shows applied to her attorney to have her deportation order suspended because she'd been in the country beyond the statute of limitation time 70 years however there's application must now be processed and the suspension order is granted has to be okayed by Congress so the Persian push to get still may be on her way out of the u.s. But the Indian government which is struggling to make some progress with its birth control program Tuesday must have been a particularly discouraging day a woman in Calcutta gave birth to her 21st child the big fish killed out of the Redwood City municipal Marine is being called the largest of its kind to hit San Francisco Bay in many years nobody knows yet what's causing the fish to die but 10000 perch in Paris and Sunday most of them are floating on the surface of the Redwood City harbor water samples and fish tissue are now being analyzed in a Bay Area laboratory to see if a boost in raw sewage is killing the fish but some state experts think it may be the same pollution problem which at Berkeley's Aquatic Park last year too much algae in the water cutting down on the Oxygen Meanwhile the harbormaster of Redwood City says if you think dead fish are bad you should see the hordes of Seagulls a attract us officials are preparing thoroughly for President Nixon's overnight visit to Paris Air Force planes with personnel landed in the French capital today they also carried a car for the president's use the bog down motorcyclist who is machines are stuck in a quagmire near Lakeport California was still sloshing around today trying to figure out a way to refreeze rescue their cycles about 200 drivers lost their bikes during a Durance race through the Mendocino National Forest some of them we're talking today about hiring helicopters to save an otherwise faultless situation and turkeys and for a brush you know that a Russian air taxi hijacked a turkey its pilot. And one passenger are free to leave the 2 students who hijacked the aircraft and asked for political asylum are not involved in boxing you believe me nobody but nobody denies published reports that he was ill from hepatitis when he lost his world middleweight boxing title by knockout to Argentina's Carlos Monzon last Saturday bet but only says it's not true to say I lost the moms are a well it was like. Going to just extend the radio or charts until 1 am so enjoy this is take a pita to know and we're listening to a show from November 11th 1970. And I think what we're going to do we're going to just move it on another year here or actually a couple years we're going to go to November 14th $197373.00 and play out the remainder of the show with. This next show we're going to go back to care Farsi 6 10 am with Weaver from 11141973. Right so obvious. We're going to. Turn a dial brother. Going to the San Francisco with all of you. a low housing project for senior citizens and I could use your help you call an 893-2739 chefs knows exactly. And they. Leave jeans and tops is what you're looking for Jeff's called legally and as you'd guess they're getting tough looking clothes for guys like Lisa saddled. Western credits smooth brush as a matching jacket with tabs and stitches and big brass buttons. Or leave brushed cord players also. Chambray shirt check very for the low leading right where you made it are simple machines you guys want to line up. And embers and. Hot Rod custom car motors. Students were called. To say I like your beautiful life get total grocery bill at all for bit with the total or any other market and you'll find out for yourself where everyone shopping now if you like the total better I don't think. Was blood.

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BBC Radio Merseyside-20180326-120000

And the other over the leaves use his Will Cooper Good afternoon one here on from the explosion which devastated the town of new ferry in we're all residents and business owners are planning to take their campaign for regeneration direct to Downing Street the delegation will hand over a letter in the next few weeks calling on the prime minister to speed up the government's response dozens of people still haven't been able to return to their homes 12 months after the blast while several businesses have closed Council submitted a plan to redevelop the area but it's still unclear how much money if any will be pledged from central governments Callum runs agence sons but says on new Chester Road he says urgent action is desperately needed to save the town we are in an emergency for a new ferry not something that could happen in the next 10 years and I know that the council feel in the same way of that but they've done what they can and they've made a great plan which is going to the government but is that do you know when is this going to happen you know is it one year 2 years 5 years 10 years no if it's one years 2 years it's too late it has to happen now a spokesperson for the Department of Communities and Local Governments has confirmed they've received a regeneration plan from where all council and have asked homes England to review its water and Ward is a local Labor councillor he says they need an answer fast the situation is dire local businesses are feeling forgotten local businesses are closing down and we are at a new crisis point as a local town center Liverpool Council is to receive just under half a 1000000 pounds from the governments to repair parts holes the money's part of a $100000000.00 pound fund being spread across local authorities around the country last year Liverpool Council warns the total cost to clear the backlog of problems was around $400000000.00 pounds where all Sefton sent Howland's and Knowsley councils are also receiving payments of between 20400000. Merseyside police is investigating following a racist attack on a shopkeeper in Liverpool who had a window cleaning fluid thrown in his face it happened yesterday afternoon at M.P. Food and winds in Bel fail the victim suffered slight burns to one eye which were treated at the scene Detective Inspector Paul Speight is trying to find out why the offender carried out the attack we keep an open mind at this stage but obviously because of the racist comments we will be doing this as it is a crime these types of fences won't tolerate on the streets most side of a dedicated team of officers who are specially trained in dealing with these types of fences before he will investigate them much in order to bring the offender to justice and pervasive being called to a street in the Fairfield area of Liverpool following reports a man had a weapon and was making threats offices closed off part of Gresham straight off lane just after 10 o'clock this morning the 31 year old has been arrested and the cordon has been lifted the children's commissioner for England says too many children growing up in the north of the country are facing a double disadvantage of entrenched deprivation and poor schools and Longfield claims a child receiving free school meals in Hackney in East London is 3 times more likely to go to university than a similar child from Hartley Paul she's calling for greater investment in the north and a scheme to boost teacher recruitment Gary Evans is the principal of Hayward Academy in Merseyside he says more funding for help but here is a loony talk about who 15 U. 20 years ago were failing to live the allegedly there was a lot of money invested into those areas I think areas like nose Lee other areas in the north worse than in the north in general would benefit from similar levels of investment the European police agency Europol says it's arrested the head of a gang which carried out cyber attacks on more than $100.00 financial institutions the suspect was held in the Spanish city of I can't say banks in 40 countries a sense of incurred losses of more than a 1000000000 your. Arose after being infected with malicious software Europol says the malware caused cash machines to dispense money which was then collected by gang members and in sports Joe Root says England's cricketers can take some comfort from the way they tried to save the 1st test with New Zealand despite going down to an innings defeat the Torres started the final day in Oakland on $132.00 for 3 and were eventually bowled out for 320 guys at a stop play to show everyone how much it meant to play for England and I thought the way went about it did just that it was disappointing loose which is when we did it at times but I don't think you'll see a lack of effort of trying and if I'm being really honest this the Test matches yesterday was awesome they won the 2nd Test begins in Christ Church on Thursday the weather dry with sunny spells for the 1st part of the SAF the noon turning cloudy later on heis today of 11 Celsius B.B.C. Radio News like incentives B.B.C. Radio Merseyside. 815170993 W. That's on the drawing will you want to talk about Robin way would you want to pick up on a recent caller hello Rob. Hello Roger but newspapers Yes yes it was somebody made a comment earlier on about The Daily Mirror and the story we go to Mike and MARCUS Well yeah I used to buy the Daily never go into well Senator well years ago by the way now I'm a I'm a I'll read a fair enough what. What started it was it was 8 pages they even back in the Daily Mirror one day apart from not really being interested in football so how can a news paper. How 8 pages in the main body was a supplement or anything just 8 pages regards David Beckham is as you know was by Finnish not my fault it was a news story was reach it was a no no it wasn't a feature any thinking it was actually no news they just decided to run the story subtly on David 2nd thought well I've bought a newspaper hopefully to read about news what's happening in the world such as yeah and 8 I mean a page maybe or something like that 8 Some get paid just ridiculous a bit back and I'm a fault I can't waste my heart and money on by a so-called news I need to a question find like a magazine or something like that well I couldn't defend that but some day me then they could defend him and say well did you like and this is very very famous man P. Want to know about him never will sell more papers but it's like the Express always puts his desk on the front page even uses news afterwards because they think it'll get people to buy the paper that they put on the phrase is going to free us was going to bother when lies were big one of the expresses and they think is most recently played was so maybe the mirror the Back Story will sell all people. Well you just think it's a little. Knowledge and I just noticed the so many people like you see that the running story lines on them and I think there's actually no news behind it it's like magazine you know off the coast Why put it in the main body of a newspaper Well the problem is and this is probably was and so by a years ago but the social media means that a lot of people young people particularly people and use up online on the phones and so forth so there's less need for a story that breaks down this temple swung and will know about by 5 o'clock this afternoon maybe even sooner so what does the newspaper do the following day. Well and for the news well I mean well of course you know much I'm afraid it might be a bit slow to stay on news by tomorrow morning or you can read it actually in that oh that's a very good point they can do a lot research on it and the night they get a much better full of stories than you would otherwise get on a bit of fun I mean you can keep it it's reference if you sort of interested in any particular news going on at Tech clippings out eccentrics extra Yeah what you come to like on a mobile phone or anything like that you know you are seeing right now will you have to go back. In there have a try just to see. What I'm like these people we got off scott free electric once you've been sort of used all taken in like that you know you don't get a 2nd chance with me and right it just. Been OK so far all I've got to admit coming ever near the local now every golf magazine articles so it might be another look for maybe a different type of cancer and what's interesting about what you're saying is I don't know what you publish on that want to know what they are but the mirror on the mail very different politics because you know the names and politics they both do different they're different they tell different stories but he often so oh yeah people say oh your mail reader you must we are rightly conservative not. No absolutely no I'm definitely not I mean I think most of them for a while I've seen like the 2 halves of the country that believe me I was supposed to have a down in London hospital you know stay to the roots and all the groups and everything I know who packed into the hall and OK the night is you could say it's a long story packed but when you get you know result at all different points of view in it that you can look at and you don't have to agree with everything in the Bible didn't say you know I said we don't I just don't want to get down to the pope now such as you when you get to the Pope you can discuss everything that I'm some you know confused this is not we took bragging about apostrophe in London I mean I hate driving in London I'm driven and now for us to you know from your full to drive a bus in London you know look to go back to the eighty's Yeah I can go back to the eighty's and ninety's where they were the route must of course is not kept and I was in a world of my own I didn't get with any passengers and you try to look take the commies I'm just such a traffic jam unfasten what would normally take you like say an hour and a half to get from $100.00 a route to the other it's taking an hour and a half to get lunch which cottage Yeah yeah it was quite. Well it really is I love the route must about us is one of the you know joys in London I love this not only that I knew all was it Boras got rid of them. One party over some of us I got another subject but it was because of European law we called back load of vehicles and we have to sort of let them go this woman now the fifteen's one in London she wrote much the report does conduct for me just will. Tell you I think. That's the way to run buses in my view just like fantastic. Thank you vehicle of road without thinking about you giving it some structure but are the 5 rougher Wavertree and assumed I pressed village and. Possibles writes Yeah. We had the same problem a few years past it was a joke I think they were waiting for the winds to get back to all of the well both since some of the PA tolls on the eugénie to where I was getting used to dodge and moans even when it was stuck with it was no lights because I could tell by where the buildings where one of the. Repaired saw him on the chimney at the I have talked with aren't within 2 weeks with They'll see the cold spell again that they had again. You know you've gotten all over the place only on your terms exactly on a major major hit all routes on the A faulty 9 and things like that and I limit to a poly we've been offered them half a 1000000 pounds for 6 or 12 single to fix the PAF holes which ability I think is an absolute joke or using because we need a permanent means I'm right in saying he's bore an 80000000 pounds in gold to try to fix the money needs I think he said 2000000000 pounds on them and 400000000 was the only way to sort of figure. Haas a 1000000 from the government from down south of it now I want an army possible he would find rounds in Pokemon policy in places like that where the whole skull parades all go on alone there are many possible see would be that round them all is the roads are fully established now there's another problem as obviously is when you've got a new road or near the surface wrote then you've got the chill is he people or whatever they're taking it all up and then they replace it with you know with Salma and then say crumbles or edges and then starts to make possibles again now surely he should be some sort of system in place with a 10 year gallons he should be put down with They've got to go and see that I'll be OK Otherwise it's a fix it's a good idea shows because that you know. Well probably in. All the people's mistrust he's going yeah I totally agree it's not just what's happening there should be some kind of indemnity so that if there's a problem there again they the United Utilities will not get gas will water the Lebanese they're the ones who have to fix it they probably just feed it back on so they have been always so you know and put the pills up like you like everything else to stop them but the other thing is astonishing cause Ok my cause not need to suspensions are not you know it's not great. Big holes but you didn't know was there. You really do have to sign off me to tell you that what I'm saying is it's not about somebody Stephen we only go and smash into someone and kill someone do you supply Amen I said good question but I'm surprised that hasn't happened already I mean the road I come in on pot road and this is weird because they filled in some parts elves and after another a lot of them filled and so you know I mean yesterday it so happened to the other side of the carriage it was clear sign she drove into the other side of the carriage way to avoid actually you know it's 2 areas don't do clubs don't know I'm still not sold on your side at all to see the I don't know what the calls are coming to the right to minimize the anomaly anymore even when you don't you know I'm swerving around I'm just praying the car behind understands and I don't buy it in a pumpkin Carter absolute adulterous allowed to be told yeah it's well you know the other thing I think that's a closer road in the end because a collapse right soon Yeah well that's going to be compelled to be a salesman Well apparently what happened there was whoever did the contract for the New Edge Lane didn't didn't do the right kind of. The possibility of not possible that's different but the surface an edge of a nice breaking up all over the place which you know it's because it wasn't done properly in the 1st place so that he took the whole lot up and do it again I'm not going to measure chaos it's some dog. Also money to pay so I don't know when they might be insurance $1.00 of the prices I don't know I don't know well I know it's going to cause and you know much disruption there's been a slang found Long who's going to have your book because I want him I know named on my reach every now and again Dave on them like you say the ready that Suffolk lights the ones you have to wait because only one lane open yet and then a couple of weeks later the potholes in it again so they sort of instill stuff you know I'm just not going to just say it isn't that I think it's jobs for the boys Sabean's Well maybe I don't show about a lot because to fix them probably the best example of that you know soft Impala their new I would have to be really thought always and they'd fill up on the next minute they go again now what they did then and they spent 5000000 quid did it they borrowed money you know to do it they did the whole surface properly. There's never been a problem since but to do it cost so much money that's what needs doing these things are people and also what you've been left now absolutely without any potholes on them now some of them some of them actually so when it started subsequent So he's like it's like you go in on the you know them blue jeans strips are the little strips on some of them of the road so I don't know one of them is joined more than one but one way I draw on it he can actually see the cobbles you actually see the couples Yeah he originally was then I'm not some lines. Haven't seen them yet but I'm sure on some way whether he's a hero but it is it's ridiculous and I really can't take a bow myself to blame the council it has got to be the government and it's not just it's everywhere that every city is going their problem. Yeah. I don't know truthfully I don't know somebody that you can tell us I doubt it but you know rocket above it. All are functional like logic. I joined chopped off a bit thanks. For Breske with the that the company's unchanged when I last gave be able to remind you service is suspended on measure rail which it will pull South Park when his course is a signalling problem and the strike action by the on to Union today to be delayed Sheffield your new governor Col Preston and Chester. Under placement buses. Have an early night with late night life Marie in Huyton says about 45 years ago she walks for an energy company and if people didn't pay their bills them the actress tea was cut off it's not like it is now where this young hero is a phrase that was this the electricity was just cause all that and she says the policy that's how the show was not to accept checks as payment unless they were signed by candles if you can sign the checks they would be reconnected right away he says he was very generous and helped ourselves loss of people this way I think that's just so typical of him join me even to my from late night my weeknights from 10 am on B.B.C. Radio my seaside. You'll piece your points you'll find in your slips B.B.C. Radio much as he said. And talking of rooms the winds and this I'm not sure which official organization I should send an email to him play and hope to redeem as I can pass on the information I mentioned on the topic comes up on many of your shows. Just a quick email we got to the latest switch Island improvement words I can imagine a body uses that switch on there is picking up in the moment I'm not sure anyone else has contacted you about this but this affects driving into the I'm 57 southwards up on that thing from switched on and not long after entering the Introduce of the beast will temporary greenish tubs on the road which filter the 3 lines left with the 1st name becomes the hard shelled the middle name becomes the 1st and I'll fill a becomes the middle from A through still 3 lanes with no hard shoulder as this is now the inside lane the 3 lanes return to normal a few months later them from the short run of road at the beginning of the interests. The problem is they've not properly removed the original white lines when you're driving it's really confusing I got goods out last week doze in the middle lane of vehicles will be obsolete then I realize mistake and quickly corrected after this the chance to move markings on the original road markings are clearly visible and paid to be more dominant stand not moving the temper studs tonight the car just ahead of me in the inside game vids middling no warning going to Keisha no requirement to overtake and this is when the lane switch left and glued in it's clear that these temporary markings unsafe I'm very confusing and then really surprised and I sometimes nap and the irony is if he's not simply was through the safety switch on and well we'll see and when they go I know this news this with all of it nobody will pay for it because I mean just me wrestling crossings and now Russell I don't see Saudi successes about the Liverpool Echo the right to criticize anything local poll I think you really need strong shit so fully revamped I know it's print it's not printed in the city center on the Mall. Basically I failed to few people say this and they when you know protest like a crime Chrisette it's safe to run up the local police station and said Want to be gone and I'd give them all the crime stories you're open and you've got to you've got that's all crime it's to trust since you've got the stories which you read in the metro or your local paper you've got the same optimistic day in day out after ties and local events the same things you know nothing mama chime like below could do with the amount of time I'm to take a call them up I told you that last time. ROACH I find I find it the whole thing the pressure not to be revamped I won't buy it anymore all it it's a roach it's terrible Well that's all the printing in a limb is a little bit of a. Because. The paper is edited him produced here is just happens to get printed You know I don't think the money bucks you are running to actually I must admit we're I think a lot of the major cuming cutbacks and the how be cutbacks here I'm cool with the Echo Nichols's New Delhi post an email or note here the recent North Wales What happens is used tend to rely on rather good out getting stories you tend to ring around and you ring around the police to file the ambulance. So you're right you do get those stories coming though it's interesting about a year or 2 back they decided they'd ask people what kind of paper they wanted and when they would like a paper and the impression I got was that they would like a paper which did not carry all of these bad news stories. For a while maybe they tried it but I think they found out even less people would see people like nasty stories still a few snippets of hope amongst it I mean did this some little funny offical last Algy pages twice a week yes yes I did deep deep thought of wonderful thing to get to peek to get people with a low income to challenge solve it kind of on hold at the airport that was little to help them you know yeah so we all try and go it's just see if you just seem to know what when you picked up not that a story about a ship called me and all I think is it's always the same horrible thing something so gullible is up to somebody somebody it really is down in ranch you know I know you would say however is that in the transmitter group which they belong to was to be changed to a much leash only but anyone in that group they are one of the best local newspapers into the sales they sell more than they do that is up but the generally the the the mirror. Is moved keen on online so that judging people only clicks the hype and when I don't mean online the online the reason maestros you click onto the story to find that well it's the clicks yellow that clicks you see was a good hooves Now how do you know that clicks when you put a sexy headline up. You know a horror headline of the things you know try people until the leaning is towards the online which reflects itself back into the paper because the news necessary to pull something out of the house it's a real big problem in the Echo Have we say no they have put this on the postals there's not a lot they can do about this don't know structured lights off 20 years if you modify mom comment threw him upon a comment box well still with the real apology comes from something I think that was not the moving with. The more oh I didn't know the. Man is who used to do all the maritime stuff for the actual on the Post for many years he's a national Yaseen I recently didn't think well he left the heck if you like Peter else I'm very into his design the jobs now but he comes in thank goodness to us and once a month he will go through the kind of things you're talking about but the ones you absolutely want you somebody's calling where every day you know we should sue coming in the oh yeah I'm going to talk about books correctly he could have the ship was that it was put down in the act of all I wanted to ask him you see about a story circulating there ought in all the ships you know rocks you know all that I'll give an example you know the axis. Plate fame. Well it was such sunk in the Indian Ocean on the scrap metal imagine Soko going down there to get enough to tip taking the ships apart on the separate no matter the sales how they don't have to do that because there are graves well promise to do in a state this is just being going on now for the year or 2 cuz i get information elsewhere now this open really fast Bilbo submarines some cough Gemini and there's an exit this one was sell a lot and all facets of somebody opposed to this thing to see fancy free. They do not rush to get an interest submarine split is this Saffold And you know in them and it's becoming pregnant put Raj to our street to take in the ships a cost access. Example mission to do you know well nobody don't but you see it's very hard to 1st for the likes of Indonesians to police if they're just going out there getting down but that the try and somebody said it's it's just like somebody this is out being described it's like somebody get a bulldozer and I'm driving through an official war cemetery so far he's taken over rocks on the it is actually just bull I would like to watch the you know if a pilot saw you know your guide is take on this because it will come out mowed a bench really but I think it's awful all in the very offsets about say they have a few warships decimated by these guys get these divers get it down if it a metal if you will remain in a lot of it's in and in Indian easy and losses because there was a big buffalo with the exits on I think at the screws at the release at the Japanese sunk a lot of us yet today but it's also believe our own Up close it's a home it's in the North Sea off Gemini that getting down to the 5th will will submarines that absolutely on the detain and off X. If it's a 10 and up in diving shows and places like the Rauch if you can maybe you can look it up on the computer and it was really going from 0 when he makes you know when he's next they will ask you to have a look at things from information I know to also to ships also mention was the Prince of Wales and he pulls them up to go at them as well as well as a pulse next room particularly Yeah they do you know Lisa halakhah say that the Tibetan offsets about say Well I think anybody should have. Just let alone these German sailors. British sailors and their lives not the way you treat what it's like to say it's disappearing going on politically it's in so I get a magazine Britain a wall and it's it's being this being a few off there that he can send you know. I Phones nobody knows when it's all on or all the spots and I just keep see as I don't like to say you have to get down Echo Thank you good luck to get behind it keep them tense a lot Iraq is yeah that's roughly questions involving chill down a ball I know right you have them you know saying they're going to reset the search line again you know a lot partly why all of this isn't on the council tracking it all be utility companies anybody who's got anything on the lease not wrote and say can you do what do you read the mission once then relay the route until the companies if it goes wrong will fine you well I think James will complicate it yeah I agree with your principle but I think that's the problem with enjoying the moment is the original length of the road when the whole thing was refurbished you know the new gadget that was badly don't know why it was probably done I don't know maybe it was the contract was wrong or they have a but it's not strong enough to take the traffic now what they are going to have to do that for think the whole thing up and really like now I don't know whether we like it properly I mean whether that will come under the insurance in the original person who sent the contracts all whether we'll come up to the insurance on the materials they used and wasn't coming to the insurer I don't know but it's until that sorted out but at the same time I agree they obese you go to all the ads and anybody you better has anything on the ground and said it was going to be do you know holding up again he said anything under there that you need checking out for the school and then you sort it out as we go along with what we won't want is a student the whole road which you stop a lot and then you come along and dig it up again I talk like you would be the sensible thing you know it's going to start on X. Date yet they're getting closer. And tell the utility companies get in there get it sorted and if it goes wrong afterwards who charge you I'm ordering please pick the road back up. Because of that no one would. But. It's difficult it's a very important road he'll be closed for an awful long time like it was a little slow took a long time again underspin insist on not new business. Because of it well I will but what I think will happen or should happen if they don't go down the backroads I think you language things what happens but nevertheless what they should say I think is you work overnight you don't work on the day or you work day and night we have 20 came around working to get them to the No 2 ways about you it's obvious reason you haven't learned your customers really yes but you actually get the money back Well yeah but not driving home that's coming across the road you have a dozen different potential in the long term you're right but it's a different account Yeah but you know one is right year. 2 point agent in a council paying for it should be the contractor Well it depends what. You don't unless there can't be council officers who accept the political the work done on this road. Because if the council of insurance has to pay up insurance premiums will rise next year because it will whoever has to pay up the wind chills through all right but I don't know when the contract was written by Lynn it was in check probably with you know I don't know when to focus but I do know exactly the road's not good enough and as we read. Actually about 8 weeks after it's been laid I looked at you know struggle breaking the dude that he sent Yeah OK. Yeah but my one is. Only contractors and that's a wrong you look at it about wrote yeah you have to fix things when the sink only slightly different to be fat but yeah the column written is really couldn't eat from a sewage pipe was it a car I'm told I think I'll go think how but I mean it gives it what it does do is it gives every utility the opportunity to just go down that and check. Exactly and then if there's a problem to be fixed and the new limbs Oh yeah totally thanks for your point well that's a good idea that there will. Be little by public to all their jobs commission averring the said that too many children growing up in the north of the country who are not sure what you mean by north are facing a double disadvantage of entrenched deprivation and poor schools is a new talk come from among field you suggested a child receiving preschool meals in Hackney anything London he's 3 times more miles because university than a similar child from Holly who she lives the capital is it was quite possible to improve education schools in London were some of the poorest in the country 1520 years ago and having gone through a program where they've been able to recruit the best teacher says really look at governance and really get the mentum behind them then you've seen how they have been able to race ahead and what I'm saying today's there are children in the north they love the north they want a future there but they also want skills jobs and prospects to rival anywhere else so young towns Li oversees the academics academies trust now that runs 10 schools apparently he says the central government were not on the north of England but we still have many young people who are in their primary schools in secondary schools are not seen very strong schools and they themselves come from lives which accounts rise by privation so they suffer that double disadvantage that means it's incredibly difficult for them to move forward effectively on the rigorous programs of study success in a level of success and degrees success in high level apprenticeships they were told to lose a principal at Hudson 61 college in Leeds says changing entrenched attitudes will be vital to making a difference in the challenges. Of life and that they in paper loss some of the people that come to this college don't believe that the. Good things in life will happen to them and actually they've got the capabilities to to go on to the better universes to get the better jobs that are actually believe that those things are going to happen to them so much so one of the things that we have to work on all the time and it's building belief in young people Children's Commissioner for a news consumer investment and a scheme to boost teacher recruitment in the north to fix imbalances of opportunity the problem for Education says 3000000000 pounds is being invested in projects to boost the economy in the north they don't say this when I say this so they're saying that's all right from now and Brian's 1st on calling from Babington Lebron Hello Roger to you I mean that if you. Just catching the end of your conversation with couple of guys about the road situation sure since you're from a more yeah and a number of times I've seen signs up on the road diversion or. No no white lines on the road keep left and all this kind of thing and those signs remain for countless months and sometimes years it would appear. To me that if they put in the local authority how much it would save them I don't know but if they counted them all at once and then the famous statement counted them all back in again they wouldn't have to go by and you walk through but probably right there is the government scheme which is general motion with is going through palms are going to have a wet utilities and others have to pay if they are working on a road they pay a certain amount 2000 pounds a day you work on the road so if they were wrong it's still going to cost them even more money so this is an incentive for them to work quickly or yes I fully understand that but it's just the signage you know they're metal or in some cases the plastic signs but they leave them up for camp the owners and if they went and collected them you know it would save them buy new ones that's. That's just like you actually you know so like I mean it may be only you know a tiny drop in the ocean to watch their costs but it may say somebody down the line an extra I don't know 2 or 3 pence town council tax Yeah I mean I see still diversion ahead oh yeah I can technique things mostly 3 roads this is diversion ahead mission finished about a year and it frightens me because I think to myself gosh I'm on the wrong road because I'm going to push the national science yet you know I'm sure that should be well should be I'm a cancer somewhere along the line to tell you no good they plan me to root stones like we're going to do this ruffian and the traffic you have to turn left turn right that part of the road going to be blocked also produced on the end of the contract. They must say Well how many signs are we put out with them food no. Absolutely. Yes but you're right they could be there maybe they do they just inefficient how the no to what every sign these are gum pick and we sign up at the end yet why don't you know I can't stand the ones where they have got the council out and nothing but nothing. Yeah they're in real life another story another program you can probably write All right thanks for your time here is my blog this by then 1st I'm going from them to. Says ID will not be covered by insurance I was in and the council will pay for this as far as I know more investigation required to reduce the roads completely we said was 12 years ago is now a complete mess Yep and I don't think you're right or wrong about that the council would maybe tell us I'm feeling well from St You can see in there who you can see trying to Paul tells it like TONY EASTLEY there's busy a bit of an ancient history the ship of glass over them so you know. When you done it with the the 1st then the doctor the 1st I don't. Don't Who won by John Lewis with a nice round laugh you look down and see what was originally maybe should allow on the road in the choice little you would get knocked down of course there I have brilliant ideas monthly Mostly though I know Miles. As I never thought I would be phoning up to the same policies Johnson normally. Is now before I proceed brain in gear you know but this is a comment about the power Russia in Germany Germany before saying well was quite true. Because Germany was then. Pushing and pushing and trying to break that all the teachers Very say we're taking over I should go to Texas evacuate all the way to do these things you know. Just like right into the Crimea that I was sat in the same thing. Over brutality Well I didn't know about. A different scale of brutality of the moment or this but just the power the cause when we went to war. With Germany we declared war on them because they invaded Poland Yeah but those guys they did after Hitler and Stalin made a pact and what they did is they got the conversation well what the German thing was that culture a convict him for a Polish uniforms on the board of a Poland Germany and shot them dead as if they'd Polish tried to invade Germany that was issued to the wall but Stalinism Hitler the 2 socialist leaders has actually made a pact that if Germany when it's a Poland that only take a half of it and Russia could have the other ha and then cause Mr Hitler did not know it in his past lives what do you know she did the going to bed with us yes but where and what did we do for Russia I think she would have a hell of a Russia Alright the outcome with the young boys you have met the same time I would argue that Russia is an awful lot for us we could just Rionda the way we do without Russia only. Russia was a Hitler bit like a lot of people don't even read you know their recent history he made exactly the same mistake as a poet that went in at the wrong time and the winter that went to destroy the German army not the Russians Well you know. They fought well 25000000 Russians died. Months ago and it's nothing like what's going on with the Soviet. I would guess it isn't because we haven't gotten south of the 3rd well yet you need a New Zealand. Yeah I don't think the best way to deal diplomatically with a country like Russia or any other country he's accused them of being like Germany following said you would mind on the phone in the foreign secretary the different matches you know as you say you know he you know people do you know with enough info to tell you it but there is not allow Stephanie part of well he should have said it not to matter. Thank you. To his man the Falcon that want to see Steve. Says I referred to the report has been published just in that children in the north of disadvantaged compared to children in the south talk about stating the obvious like numerous reports in recent years telling is exactly the same thing I look for the 2 of you just studies the toll it's how it's a bad and the religious persuasion of the pope because you will now live Christine . And you have to about the. The and they have been shocked I would. All be quite happy to go to the. Corner of me I seen a guy and. Had to try couldn't see it. With a Dom across his chest. To make I couldn't mistake it was definitely a rifle and I was shocked and I was just so well is that I was just driving through the world so I thought it was a day soon as a pole though my. Whereabouts wasn't so much you can possibly think of me towards Liverpool a degree in garden center Yeah you know in the open field for a bit and then you get to the forest yes start a little focused on your right as you come in to go on a ranch on side on the right hand side there's like a house the fetus I'm confident I couldn't take all those a little bit shocked the just kind of looked out of and so she got it looked at me not really what's to stop him can shoot me I don't know well it's game and you know we walk around with you sure it was callous Lodge's Well Roger he was full camouflage gear like you felt like yeah yeah. From head to toe I couldn't even see his face Raj it is like he had something to overtake like and kind of go with. You couldn't see it had any sense the in the area of this crime easiest one would interrupt you because you said you then went to the police and yes the colder scene of the court you know the how to the Gulf oil yes I do not and he pulled into that road and I rang the police and just said I don't know whether this is an amazing sea are not just seen a guy with a goat will consider what field so they obviously said well yes it is you know you should that's not normal and they took they took it from they rang me back what about it it's hard to describe what is opposing it a little bit you know you know you talk to a lot of this and. Not just off the head but Roger I don't know what happened as it was I'm going to lose to another day trying to do one thing the February I was a bit back knowledge of everyone time of day and I was on the phone a fink was about 1 o'clock pm or I move to call the police who brought in organizing back withdrawing Yeah all right I can I think I think anybody with visible guns around is dangerous deciding whether when they see again people are. Whatever they may I have the right to do it I don't know but maybe you didn't hear I'm surprised given the recalls almost the police should be coming back to people and telling them what's happened in relation to any of them. Didn't hear anything and then there was shock for the rest of the day they are never you know not what you expected you know what I'm looking for I'm not your hard drive and you know I'm not real business economy I may have been created by run by. I'm glad I was able to terrify me as well. But I proceed thank you for what you did which is right thing to do and she will think something like that because you can chill and I'm pleased to be able to tell you that the tragedies must changed at least slightly there was a problem with him too when his course is being sorted it was a signalling problem has been sorted the service is now running again almost unknown which is typical South By the way and towns cost but he may well know the strike action today by an empty union that's affecting munches to Piccadilly Sheffield York new council call Preston on the chest reduce at least a replacement buses. With a grand national Just 2 weeks away this Wednesday night we look back to the most incredible race ever seen. Not by not. Funny even if. It was not actually tonight John Canal term look man development time I don't have all. Good news keep money feet for you know even when of the 967 crime national He has a full story including the last ever interview with jockey John Buckingham on a messy side sport this Wednesday night. I mean you're not going know when tonight you might be intending to go to run mountains round the clock talk under the who've lost tram film show which. I mentioned last week was happening well it still is happening but unfortunately the monk community center where it was to take place will be close refurbishment for the next Will weeks says not available for that lecture. When the members of wedgie colleague ational judge come to the rescue so that's even in the church which is in Hunter's lamed of the 15 if you don't have to claim it runs from church north to Prince Alfred road and the chill of a half way long if anybody just enough of the can you just sent as could be some woman had to be direct them and they moved the stock in time at times as lame to 8 o'clock rather than 7 but was going it sounds really interesting the chant and show the film sell off such a postcards of books D.V.D.'s good Illustrated told by Romanov in that but not at the Community Center rather wave she called on Wednesday and all this a veggie at 8 o'clock and flew in the atrium out of the program not given Gus the legend I do not judge and I've got a problem with these days with the people who are all over sensitive. Coming down everything looking for something to take offense fuck. This new willingness to apologize profusely for the most cruel of things now I'm up to. That goofy thing I applaud graffiti I don't like any of it. Look at it not your eyes full of Jewish people when I looked at the. Book did it in full or clean men around a table for men to represent the film fill much should be the end of this. Thing I'm reading it. Happens immediately look and the 5 again killing people would be pretty good. Coming from China. My 2 nephews went to King David said. Jewish people and he was from anybody else so there is no need for me to look at a picture and immediately think to myself there juice it would have to be something else to identify than the most used to make but it's everything now it's everything 19 Eighty-Four one of these days Roger our clocks are going on strike 30 then we'll know we're rarely in the mire. Now by minorities minorities whose job it seems to me is to scout you look for something to take offense of well I never volunteer even look at this thing my understanding is that it is good for a bank is. The full post but you don't realize that he's actually saying that all Jewish and they leave the slurs in those means of fat cat bankers you must be Jewish that it's true that's what he's saying now is that the process that's on the wall. So I. Passed that on the wall maybe but he didn't Gee actually says I agree with this he agreed what he's saying use with dividing the banks is ruining the world capitalism of the world as well as you know yes it is such a slur against Jews so many believe things you now think that because he's oppose the apologizes because warns of pressure to apologize look carbons politics are not my politics I have a sneaking regard for him because he's one of the sphere with your thumb on a question it gives you an answer not like some of the other very slippery politicians that we have. This given a chance now at stake if this is a mistake I can see that it is but it's a mistake. It's trivial I mean apparently according to the British Board of Deputies this is the Calif tip of an iceberg are well you see what could be true of course it could I don't know I think about anti semitism in the neighbor party. So I can't comment from the US I would say that I do think that the Jews at times get a value or tail press wise. On the personal opinions. Of to look at it. Suck it up on spec say. Look this business of we're told no what to think what not to say don't say this. Things can break. The condemnation down on your head cries all this way Raja now I'm just saying anything. But I think the social media thing is why. We develop so quickly. I think you're right I mean I made for him I think. Them looking for stories I'm building a story upon nothing. Else now people are afraid of voicing an opinion if they think it's a tall contentious Well maybe al of you know I don't know it wasn't about voice contentious things to look at this way Roger. Nobody can self identify a sex that's my view you say that publicly I know that since if. If I go hungry in effect I would say it was but it upsets a lot of people that's true. The point is the 1st thing they're upset should not in pain chip on my right to say it it depends exactly what each plans exactly what you are saying even who is saying for his sins it is not your right in my view to say any transgender person should be killed because transgender people about. In the position where I know transgender people may have the going through the 12 month period I have I have to say Roger a lot of respect for them but this won't last a constantly being made on the salon the radio and on the television yes I am a woman unfortunately the tragedy of all this is that they will never be women they can only be a facsimile of a woman Roger is a very messy business they will never menstruates well never can but if they will go through the man a pulse. Think of a very messy to women so you know I ask the woman take offense at this. I can't talk like that offense without the world coming down on my shoulder and then say they do tomorrow because no time today but I doubt in the world will come down the aisle making friendly rational people will disagree with it but they'll make a perfectly rational case as well some say get it so that didn't think there was anything. Really does now because you send an apology. Because people are too quick to apologize mean the change their mind whether it's by the 1st minorities who are on the. Days Out of 7 or the hour to make the point well thanks a lot for that OK Roger. Aldama joining us in that interest in this is a statement just came in from Jewish Voice for labor and indeed Jack you said he has not confirmed this from judicial Shalaby says Will the B.B.C. Give it any prominence whatsoever they write this we are Jews in the Labor Party currently actively campaigning for Labor in local elections would have pulled by the actions and statements of the Board of Deputies they don't represent us or the great majority of Jews in the party who she has every Coburn's religion for social justice and fairness Genom is consistent commitment until racism is all the more needed now as the British people call time on man the Tories they get the most desperate there is necessarily more onto semitism on the right to politics Norman left and healed in a session claiming to represent Jews in the laymen plotty should be holding up to criticism the senior X. Advisor to the prime minister who recently used a national newspaper to dredge up under Semitic conspiracy theories and the one conservative party we issued a don't wish to leave the taming to mobilize racism in the local election campaign the Board of Deputies on the Jewish leadership council being silent on both they have nothing to say either on the Global Rise of the far right and the toxic and to immigrant rhetoric of the tabloid press Jewish history surely gives us an imperative to speak out against both racism and fascism the Board of Deputies and the jail Fenian the Jewish neighborhood council of business and those supporting them must be aware that this is an attempt to influence local elections and them to do with the real and necessary task of challenging racism and anti Semitism at all levels of political life we call in to stop playing party politics and start representing what our community needs we believe that it's best represented by the politics we fight for and him to see is when on May 3rd and says My sister lives right by where the lady has seen them when they go it's the Fama you hear the sound of guns all the time I'm sure the police are aware of this not for they have not been in touch with an ID and finally call from Bootle and it's at 9. O. No hierarchy and I last spoke to you. Some years ago when I worked at the wall. So every time. I thought surely I called. Around to. Just spout it out she goes to strong. Cheshire but when probably have I'm like. I just wanted to write because I heard on the news a small because in some schools a lot of the. So you know I started helping in the nursery in the school. Up in the intersection. Just wanted to last as you well know the 1st school as paying congratulate if. They have a 100 percent of the pupils reach alexy to the expected standard in reading a month a month fix up the end of the cage stage to take off to congratulations from the right song ripple next pay recall to unless it's just the normal behavior of our schools our child in very well but the schools as silent as a child's walk the changes the chicest you can not cite. The amounts of worked up typos. The visits that they have to fill places are a lot because I have been helping sometimes when of going to the. Base to console and sometimes fail so I have really worked hard for these children what they say at the end before the culture 2nd wish to leave us chairing a whole 2 percent of the stuff they've been able to read. The mathematics and the stuff actually of solely because of grounds of it to counsel. And I put it so price for white people help in the sense. I've been able to say how well so many of the pupils are so I've heard from the different teachers so I just want to smack show it's not all school special for China. But they tell us hope has got a pass on the part if they're doing really well so I'd like to thank. Mrs Sophia Thompson you start. Life Firstly I'm a transient don't think so these children at this school in Crohn's and you live in blue because my Tolson absent Council after. Trample up and down. Well actually well the Post Office Well I think plants. IN THE WRONG about that yeah I just want to know. After retiring from the nursing profession. I say and what some of the changes after the process and now they have time for a room stop they have to reach a certain a certain and certain things are just very lucky people compare these things yeah I think you'll see less about spin side by the permanent another leave it there but thank you very much and young people are sometimes. Like the guy from. Thank you very much Roger. That's just not Billy Don't tell a town like jelly it's not just a lease. That's a surprise for us it has to be right by surprise took you right by surprise right that's it thanks very much Roger back again at midday tomorrow of course I'm Lisa Marie in for Jenny Lee summers right now let's get up to date. Trying to convince the government to take urgent action in the regeneration of the area it's one year since the explosion which destroyed several buildings the council has submitted a plan to Westminster the Department for Communities and Local Government says it's been passed to homes in England to look through it a delegation from the area will hand over a letter in the next few weeks cooling on the prime minister to speed up the process Callum edge runs edge and Sun's butches on you Chester Road He's one of those involved we have 11 staff working with in action sons and I really fear for everybody's jobs in this you know these guys have got.

Radio-program , Political-science , Mass-media , Administrative-divisions , Elections , Financial-institutions , Law-enforcement , Trinity-mirror , Local-government , Forms-of-government , English-cricketers , Legal-professions

BBC Radio Scotland MW-20180118-150000

Since taking office the U.K.'s to spend an extra 44000000 pines to improve security and other channel ports a man has contacted police Scotland claiming to have new information about the controversial death of Kevin McCloy whose body was found in Wick Harbor 20 years ago officers treated the case as an accident but missed McLeod's family believes he was murdered the force say they are due to meet the potential witness they've also made a fresh appeal for information done it he 1000000 pine v.n.a. Museum is to open its doors to the public in September it will be the only branch of the museum in the world outside London the museum will tell the story of Scottish design as well as shoe kissing international design. Celtic Connections gets underway tonight in what is its 25th anniversary the festival has grown into one of the biggest in the world and this year will see $300.00 vents on $28.00 stitches across Glasgow including for the very 1st time the s.s.e. Hydro event at the rectory believe success is partly down to the city's love for music it really coincided with the beginning of an amazing resource if you like and traditional and folk music in Scotland been the backbone of its success really Glasgow is really suited to host this festival runs I think because was an incredible city for music generally and audiences are great and we've just tried to build up a reputation for being creative with the shows news no sport a friend Henry thank you the Scottish Football Association hopes to move a step closer to making Michael in New York the next Scotland manager following talks with the Northern Irishman today he's been their preferred candidate since Gordon struck a contract wasn't renewed last year the Motherwell manager Stephen Robinson says it's a no brainer for the s.s.a. To be pursuing his fellow countrymen for the Scotland job at the Australian Open tennis defending champion Roger Federer and Novak Djokovic are both through to the 3rd droned in Melbourne but some other top players have struggled stand Brinker you had a continent and God been on the are all out Scottish golfer Stephen Gallacher And Richie Ramsay are 2 shots off the lead at the Abu Dhabi Championship the defending champion there Tommy Fleetwood and Japan see death to a title Harra are setting the pace on 6 under par and editor Boxer Josh Taylor will defend his w.b.c. Silver super lightweight title against 37 year old Mexican whom better to sort through in Glasgow on March the 3rd more sport throat news drive through the top Thanks Frank in the highlands the 85 Ullapool to North Castle growed badly affected by snow in parts Likewise the in 93 Braemar and the 82 bridges 42000 who really stretch but that would do remain open because I talk magician road is closed this is because of the. No So this is the it's up to Callum bridge and the m 74 snow causing hazardous driving conditions between junctions 11 Peniel and 15 beach at Summit to do light how you go here and a decent gallery to a 7 a one Moffat is close North by again because of the snow and then the borders in our Leatham to be 7 or 9 Leatham road that's closed again because of the weather that's b.b.c. Radio Scotland travel. And the weather mixture of bright or sunny spells and further wintry shores of the shores falling asleep on snow inland and over higher ground and heavy at times across the west and the night the shores in the West will turn increasingly heavy on were frequent and could merge together to bring further snow and ice for us as we head into the evening b.b.c. Reduced call in years this is the genesis for sites show on b.b.c. Radio Scotland. Whatever you are you're staying warm good to have your company coming up listen in the director of the final year Greg Barker he got unique access to the White House was documentary about Barack Obama's foreign policy team in the final year of his administration becoming bang up to date this year marks the 200th anniversary since the world 1st read the story of the doctor who took medical science to its limits and beyond to create a neo human being the archetypes of Dr Frankenstein and his creature have lived vividly in our collective imagination ever since since with the story of course and you'll know about it since today's a film show the story inspiring countless adaptations on stage and screen some C.D.'s some very very funny but what by Frankenstein's author Miti Shelley what do we knew about the exceptional teenager who invented the Dr and his tragic creation well published the 200008 massive Frankenstein is a New York a biography by Prize winning writer and poet funa Sampson is called inception of the ghetto who don't Frankenstein and funa joins me from London welcome to the program Fiona Thank you Janice it's great to be with you so it's like yeah I know that a lot of people listening will feel that they perhaps nor a sort of line. Perhaps meaty Shelly's life I'm wondering did you feel that there was a whole lot of detail that remained elusive for you in feeling a sense of her tradesman's as a as a human being yes I think that what's great about Mary Shelley is that she she created these archetypes but she has so for us a bit of an archetype too I mean in a sense she was a very modern young woman and then and then you know mature woman she was a professional writer at a time when that was really unusual for women and because she was the daughter of radicals and she ran off with and eventually married a fellow radical She was in the center of the very rapidly changing ideas of what we call the mantissa now days about modernity about sod's invention what the self is what it might be like if you are religious all these ideas so and she played her part in shaping those ideas then and so our ideas now that makes her really influential despite the fact that when she wrote Frankenstein she was only a teenager it's extraordinary tell us a bit more than about her early life and it's almost like a whole environment yes it isn't she could have chosen a better way to be born in a way her father was William Godwin famous radical philosopher and her mother was Mary Wollstonecraft probably more famous for us today because she wrote a vindication of the rights of woman she also right even wrote a vindication the rights of man as it happens she didn't confined herself to feminism she was really clear that women's rights are human life she is a very exciting figure unfortunately she died as a result of giving birth to Mary she died 11 days after Mary was born so Mary was brought up initially by her doting father and then he remarried when she was 4 he remarried. I don't think she was wicked stepmother she was a practical woman perhaps not quite so arty farty not quite so much of an intellectual. Mary never got on with her. So there was a kind of difficult teenage patch where Mary got sent away from home possibly because she had eczema possibly because she was behaving badly we don't quite know . So then she comes back home 16 from done deep by the way she spent 2 years in Dundee. And she meets Percy Shelley young up and coming poet Terry good looking her father's disciple her father's acolytes she meets him at home you know someone her father really approves of but of course he's already married with one child and another on the way. They run off together. It doesn't go that smoothly. Percy's 1st wife kills herself because she's been abandoned Mary then gets to marry Percy. But interestingly they never get custody of the 1st wife's kids because they regard to so disreputable Meanwhile 2 years later they've gone to spend the summer in Geneva where Lord Byron shortly follows them they spend the summer together they would go stories together favorite of last year he saw in the film and famously there's a conversation which starts the writing of Frankenstein which is published on the 1st of January 1900 but anonymously. I think that anonymously is is really important too because of course she's a woman and even though the Bronte sisters for example or George Eliot will oversee also writing women they and they are that little bit later they vote under a male pseudonym so they didn't have that kind of sense that they were. Just disreputable they were doing something that women shouldn't do funny that continues isn't it with you using initial so that people might not think of them as being women writers on the cover that's fascinating in a nutshell the you give us a sense of this extraordinary extraordinary. A life for you there has been a lot written the better for you and for you with this with the to understand the Russian particularly in wanting to bring a feel that you know close to forcible what how did you go about it maybe in a different way from other people did you do different kinds of research to John f. Anything that you don't have before yes thank you that's I'm glad you feel that it's up close because that was my intention I mean there has been a lot written but not since the year 2000. And 6 and she hasn't been put at the center of her own life story this still a sense that she was you know the daughter of a famous parents and the wife of a famous husband and I wanted to and there is a tendency to be a little bit caricature you know mistletoe by extension of those Frankenstein you know comedy films and you know rather kitsch chorus to make Mary into that kind of figure but because she was a character she was a person she was a real person she was inconsistent she had motivations she sometimes didn't know what to motivations were she had troubles in her life I'm sure she would have had to think she you know she as well as having a very exciting race in life in which she had lots of incidents happen to her very early on she also just had daily life yeah and I think that it's I think the biography is entering a new phase in a bug for you has been very fashionable and then he's fallen out of favor a little bit and I think that's because we are very interested in something which is much we now call life writing don't we so we like Mystery memoirs we want to know what it was like for someone we don't just want to know names and dates and I wanted to try and do that for Mary but I didn't want to fictionalize a toll every single thing in my book is as good evidence to back it up every single thing whether it's from a newspaper the time or it's a birth register in. In Naples or it. Letters or manuscript of Frankenstein or all Mary's Journal. Whatever it is I have not invented anything I simply looked closely at what we know and with a different intention instead of being encyclopedic Yeah I wanted to be human and I think that's a really romantic big our project because a Mary was a romantic that's what they were interested in they were interested in the feeling full human being that she want to debate a very modern for us but also to go back to Mary's moment and write the kind of biography she might yes I feel have wanted and I mean is a big question but if you were to serve some up you want me to her tick I mean you talked about you know the extraordinary parents and the big incidents in her life but underlying that you know what kind of young women while she and then older women I think she was very sincere That's what comes across over never she was not what she absolutely wasn't was a kind of muse of which you know having been a poet myself I have made around poets a lot you know it's a kind of Eternal Return of the kind of woman who perhaps doesn't write herself the house but is very flirtatious and that's a little bit manipulative and America's kind of completely the opposite of that she has so was a maker I think she was pretty brainy but she was also very imaginative she was a very loyal friend she was a very doting mother she was actually a very loyal and doting wife and partner and I think she just was incapable I think she wasn't she didn't have gone I don't think she was actually manipulative enough I think some of the people around her were pretty manipulative not just Percy but some of her women friends too and I think she was a bit sort of innocent I think she was a straight in a way for all that she had this exotic what was said a bohemian life you know yes because remember the beginning especially when she's so young you think of being this larger than life of Mordor and female rebel Yes I think she was but I think she just was very intense and passionate and idealistic and she kind of didn't look down if you know what I mean she didn't. A bit like you know a kind of cartoon character running off a cliff she didn't realize she was out in space yet she's gone off into the cliff she didn't realize what a radical thing she done in running off with Percy indeed she thought her family would approve because it was one of the things have fatherhood argued for in his philosophy you know let's get rid of these old outdated traditions like matrimony. And I think she just yeah I just think she had that kind of slightly single pointedness a very sincere very brainy single pointedness I mean I would love to know and I think I mean if you're a friend yes I'm sure you would tell us more about Shelley then what kind of a mom what kind of a husband Recy not great I just difficult for me because I came to marry via Percy I did an edition of Percy poetry for Faber back in 2011 and that was really interesting because you know Shelley has a little bit of a dated figure of what a poet might be fairly lengthy poems verse novels I mean a lot of words you know like in that film Amadeus you know when the Emperor says to Mozart 2 men you know it's a little bit too many words per se but fascinating finding that to come will suddenly living exciting and he oversee was really interested in revolution and change and motion and not getting stuck emotionally Unfortunately as well as politically and in terms of science and what that meant in emotional terms was obviously he didn't have great powers of concentration or commitment and he certainly he put tried to push Mary into having a sexual relationship very early on in their marriage I don't think she did she was quite resistant. But he obviously did and he seemed unable to grasp what it was like for the women in his life for example Mary nearly died of a miscarriage just a few weeks before Percy himself died. And just 2 days after that miscarriage he's writing to his best friend saying you know basically complaining about her attitude I mean she's just nearly died and she's also a child you know kind of in cold head. Just something yeah I just want to think that something might lead pipe to readers today given everything that's going on with the me too many feeling confident coming forward and talking about issues that had over the years with men yes I think it is I think it is very much a story for the me too moment is difficult because I don't want to story to end up being about Percy again I don't I do think Percy was a very interesting writer bought Yes I mean I haven't made up any facts or any comments or anything in my book I've only recorded what he did and he did what he did you know there's been some speculation of course she wouldn't been up to writing this yourself and perhaps she's not the author So yes I mean you know that is very me too isn't it just a poor thing I mean if you I mean not only are the facsimiles I mean not only are the manuscript the notebooks of Frankenstein in the boldly in library but they are all available online you can just Google them facsimile of the whole of Mary's manuscript and you can see where Percy edited and extremely light little suggestions edits changes a phrase here and there and then the much less in a line it it does in a publishing house today I mean of course he would have discussed it with each other but you know Mary fact hope it passes poems and talked about his work with him yet no one says oh he didn't really write it because she helped him with it you know that's kind of terrible double standards for you this is this is a bit of a shift isn't it this is a big book and lot of research is writing poetry more fun. No. Praise is much easier more fun. It is you know the thing up roses is lovely. I had to do more yes and with this was it really just the idea of you know as we said there's been a lot written and then it may be a bit of a gap but it's you signed up so if I are dealt with sort of. Almost like being a policy of midis and to present the living Vashon over to the world yes I am fired up he said I do feel like a power which is you know very cheeky of me and obviously you know unrealistic but yeah I do it I mean I have to say I was approached by the publishers I mean I'm I was so overjoyed because I've been wanting to write a literary biography for a long time yeah but I would never have had the who press to suggest Mary Shelley but because I'd worked on Percy Of course yeah that's why they approached me and I'm so glad they did because I have absolutely loved getting to know when I've loved the process yeah I do think yeah see there's a lesson for you to not to pursue just confidence exactly though Larry going to feel you know the next Fall him. It's been really great talking to you thank you very much indeed pleasure Jana thanks so much thank you you go that's fewer Sampson whose inception made the girl who Frankenstein is published by Profile Books today all the information at the link my b.b.c. Radio Scotland web page tonight on b.b.c. Radio Scotland 9 key sessions was Roddy hot and here's a little preview originally from Aberdeen this band called The x. Satirist it's quite good as an exit to focus for today's film theme show here they are with feels like falling in love. Let. Me. Let. They go that is for a preview of tonight's edition olf key sessions that already hot you can b.b.c. Radio Scotland from 9 o'clock. Called the x. Sat on the fields like falling in love and also in the line up play Adam Holmes and the embers right returning to film the final years a unique insight as a kind of President Barack Obama's foreign policy team June their last year in office director Greg Barker go on President is access inside the White House and State Department following Secretary of State John Kerry u.n. Ambassador Samantha Power deputy national security adviser Ben Rhodes and President Obama himself as they prepare to leave power after 8 years in the school is that their legacy would depend on the outcome of the pending 2016 presidential election ahem so the Nuffield talked to Greg about the experience of shooting the film and what prompted them to make it you know as it happens I spent most of my life overseas in fact I lived in the u.k. . For 18 years so during the entire presidency of George w. Bush and I really saw how. During those years America's reputation in the world was kind of destroyed and it really became my passion to make films that kind of connected an American an international audience with stories that kind of help us understand how America related to the rest of the world so that's like a as a preamble and I was fascinated by the Obama administration's foreign policy both in policy terms and also just the dynamics of the team that he'd assembled and kept together for really a decade as it happened I knew some of them a new Samantha Power from her days as a journalist and I knew Ben Rhodes who worked in the White House a bit from a previous project and I approached them in the summer of 2015 and said look you know here's my idea let's make a campaign film but in reverse so we're going to track you all as you go out and try to get a lot of stuff done lock in your legacy your achievements during this last year and then see what happens and of course none of us imagine that that there was going to be the to mulch or was selection but what I what I set out to do and I think the film achieves is kind of like conveys the humanity of the core and the struggles and the debates at the core of what's normally a very opaque process which is diplomacy I have been struck initially as a journalist in Bosnia and now certainly as a diplomat that's the extent to which discussions about what to do about problems seem completely removed from those problems this is dean of the Jordanian ambassador this is the one who is going to go right 1st saw here today so for me it wasn't some conscious choice for several of my teams that you know I'm going to do things differently we're going to take ourselves out to the field as often as possible and sit down with the people who are affected most by conflicts was just instinct it was how I used to report stories I don't I'm Ok with I'll be around I'm Ok. Ok Ok bearing witness is both an instinct and a responsibility it is also the best way I know of convincing people which is the essence of what I'm trying to achieve as a diplomat is definitely in part the study of the nature of diplomacy isn't it because the people you follow there are also charismatic hardworking and they believe deeply in the power and the potential of diplomacy and all the while the clock is ticking for them yeah I mean I'm I think you know that's kind of the way it normally is inside most administrations Republican Democrats I mean this is there's been a large largely sort of consensus in foreign policy terms in the u.s. Since the 2nd world war up until this election we have now and I think why the film has so much power is that what used to be normal is now completely thrown out the window and so I mean with the film sort of just by the circumstance of the world that we're in the film is like a window into this reality that no longer exists but I hope also you know conveys a sense that we can get back there your film is a capturing of that unique moment as you say and I was away when I was watching at the office he had the outcome of the presidential election being different there would have been a different end to the film and certainly a different relationship with the film for The View Yeah I mean as a filmmaker I've never had an experience where audiences watching it have such a immediate visceral reaction to what they're seeing so we're so it's like a historical document in one way I mean there's and there's 2 narratives going on there's the narrative of the film which is what happened in 2016 and then there's the counter narrative which is going on in our brains as we watch the film and think about everything that's going on today and I find personally every time I see it I'm reacting to whatever happens to be in the news that day whether where it is a whole scene in the film where President Obama visits or ocean he was the 1st u.s. President to go to Hiroshima and speak there we must change our mind set about war itself to prevent conflicts through diplomacy ordinary people understand this I think they do not want war. Very moving experience but now I find that you know just so much more powerful with the looming threat of a possible war in the Korean Peninsula and so you know it's that experience of watching it that I think makes it you know as a filmmaker it's very exciting to see and audiences engage with it so much but it's really it's it really speaks to the moment that we're it's bizarre moment that we're living in and that concept of leaving a legacy that fascinating and one isn't it because you know that working that the people you follow They're working hard to leave a legacy and yet the very aware of how vulnerable it is it will be in the next administration what did you learn about the ways in which even the people who hold the most power in the world can impact the world that we have and I don't want to speak for them but I think what everybody from really the president on down realized once they were in office is how fleeting power is and frankly how limited power is so you know you think you can accomplish all these things and you can accomplish a lot clearly but you can't get everything done and so they really felt this pressure of time and I think the Obama had instructed his team that like you know early in the in 2016 to act as if somebody was going to be elected who would was going to be completely opposed to their policies they all expected Hillary Clinton to win but he was sort of saying let's get as much done as we can because we just don't know the priorities of the next ministration we know that things could unexpected things can happen so let's just get stuff done and you really felt that pick me as the your progress this kind of this increased pace but at the same time they were and I think the film conveys this completely blind to the you know the looming sort of rise of trauma I mean I was I think you know pretty much all of us were I mean there's a scene in the film on on election night investor Samantha Power invited all the female u.n. Ambassadors to her apartment along with Gloria Steinem and Madame. Albright former u.s. Secretary of state for a celebration which turns out very differently Well it seems to me that you went on such an emotional journey with them because you mentioned that key scene with the party that Samantha Power arranged and the key moment I think is where we we sort of joy and Ben Rhodes outside once the results had come in and he was standing outside and he could barely speak you know the aftermath of the election results they move so viscerally from hope and positivity to bewilderment and fear Did you share those emotions with him as a filmmaker I mean when you know I did a documentary filmmaker that's what I'm always looking for is it's authentic visceral emotions I really did not set out to make a policy film about foreign affairs I mean my background is more as an investigative journalist but I found that I can and can reach people in a more sort of visceral way by truck trying to tell stories that are grounded in emotions basically in a film about foreign policy local There's a lot of things that meetings of the situation room that they're never been allowed cameras in a lot of stuff that's classified but what's not classified are human emotions and that's really where I wanted the film to kind of inhabit this kind of the it's emotional journey of these of these characters who have these jobs that we never really get a window into most the time we see foreign policy officials like you know is talking heads on on the news or in print and very dry and academic and boring frankly and foreign policy is my passions I want to find a way of bringing that to life and you know who knew that it was going to be such a such a momentous year with some moments as well with President Obama tell us about those and what you think he was feeling at those times I mean it was we spent our time with President Obama and you know from the outset I did not want right standard sit down interviews in the Oval Office or the Roosevelt Room which is often where he does a sort of t.v. Stuff because it's very politicians are so used to doing us that they get very you know just go into a certain interview mode so I want to do. Capture moments that are more spontaneous and we get the best stuff actually traveling overseas because he was more relaxed and and via hope that he embodied after the election and the way he tried to rally his team and put the results in some kind of historical perspective were pretty remarkable and he's in in the film he visits Greece and tours the Acropolis right after the election is talking about the nature of democracy and its enduring principles in the ebbs and flows of history and that's really the way he was talking to to his whole team privately as well is pretty remarkable to witness that up close it's it's ultimately where. Politics government diplomacy. Has to be rooted. In that moment in that belief in our common humanity. Without being naive understanding of the world is a dangerous and difficult place without being so idealistic that you don't. Protect and preserve America's core interests. We can make those kinds of connections. And they can in some small increment we're making the world. They go of course the voice of President Barack Obama in the final year which is the documentary made by Director Greg Barker who's talking there to city refute and yet the film if you fancy seeing it it's going to be available from to morrow or an online streaming site so how do we look for that on demand and then they'll be selected screenings on the Glasgow Film thesis from the 2nd until the 5th of February and the cameo in Edinburgh on the 6th of February get it from b.b.c. Radio Scotland so nights get a night of seventy's songs that still stay fresh today. From the pioneering sightings cross for. The social commentary Marvel. At street all blonde. Recorded in the seventy's but relevant and 2018 on tonight's get on some 630 playing the songs you want to hear Monday to Thursday on b.b.c. Radio Scotland and it since the 1970 s. . Have just the video gamers that kids whiling away time in the rooms and consoles and darkened rooms things of kimono heck of a in the ensuing decade certainly not the only way to enjoy video games and here's an intriguing one dear Esther life is a video game brought to life in a huge screen in front of an audience with an eraser and a siren try being performed live in tandem. The game is going to be happening at the actual hole in Edinburgh this Saturday and I find video games translate to live on stage experience with journalist Thomas McMullan who'll be playing the game on stage at the weekend and Jessica Curry who composed the rather lovely sunshine. I think it's something really different I think when most people think of games they maybe think a thief or Call of Duty or destiny kind of the sporting games of fighting games and there s that is extremely lyrical it's a narrative driven game so it's all about the story and you're uncovering what has happened in this relationship between the writer and his Esta and it's quite mysterious it's very slow paced it's exceptionally beautiful musically visually and narratively everything just comes together. Like a little diamond in a way it's a beautiful story told us can you just paint a picture No No spoilers but the experience for the audience as they go into the actual whole on Saturday is essentially a video game but it's a big cold Meenal experience and you are the past and he's playing the game life so where are you do we see you there's the big screen how does it work so I'm on stage so I'm going to on stage behind a computer but you'll be able to see me around me a musician's a live voice actors well and my job is to basically explore this beautiful island just can die and have made the best way to think about it is if you imagine this island is covered with lots of invisible trip wires and when I walk through one of these invisible trip wires it sends a signal to the if the musicians. Or to the actor that there's a specific line or piece of music that they should perform so in some ways I'm I'm going to be playing the game I guess I'm also kind of a cinematographer in that you'll be able to see on the big screen obviously what's happening on the island Yeah and I'm also a bit of a puppet master and I'm kind of triggering all of these different performances from all the other people in the company so it's a big purchase for you then basically trying to. Responsibility and you have mentioned island should we should say this is that what we can see is it's a Hebridean landscape. And it's so exceptionally beautiful I think people are blown away when they 1st their reaction I've had from non-game is that they can't get their heads around the fact that it's not a film because it's so photo realistic but it also has these elements of magic realism as well so you getting the best of both worlds in a way getting credible kind of detail and beauty and the rugged sense of emptiness but you're also getting what games do so well which is putting you in the center of and making you feel like you are the protecting nest of your very own bespoke journey sensing this isn't it Jessica because it's the whole idea of videogaming such a solitary personal experience and this is absolutely opening and I'm thinking about music as you were involved in this right from the beginning when it was a very collaborative project Yeah absolutely my husband Dan made the game and he was writing his Ph d. At the time about 1st person shooters and he decided to make a game to explore some of the things that he was interested in one of which was if you take all of the gameplay out of the game what with the player reaction base I was actually came out of a very academic and theoretical question and he asked me to do some music for this game and it completely changed our lives we didn't expect anyone to play it it was a real art house you know very small experiment in a way but it really really captured people's imaginations and we put it for sale on February 14th 2012 I'm. Thinking our friends would buy and my mom had pledged to download Steve so she could buy it is gay love it and then we just saw the numbers rising and rising and rising and I think offered something very new and very different you know a lot of games a very fast paced a very high octane they want that constant feedback and they're offering called the spin stimulus and the rest it really is the opposite of that experience is kind of almost like a talk of the film I sometimes where it's slow and meditative and beautiful and it's so in massive and I think that's the response we've had more than anything so far the previous shows people of that I was so sucked into that world and it's kind of you know like when you come out of the cinema and you rub your eyes and you come out into law and you know how you feel changed I think when things are good and effective and people are having that reaction which is wonderful That's very interesting Thomas because I would have imagined my producer has played the game and again with spoilers she's describing is incredibly intense and you really feel that you are the it on the silent and you really feel the elements around you I'm imagining that absolutely if you're playing just on your own but the idea if you get to the actual whole this great big building Thomas can you give us an insight into how that works maybe just as Jessica was saying because you're watching on the big screen it's like a big is it is it like a movie experience I think it's a really interesting experiment because you're taking something that is inherently in interactive form so you know the game is designed to be played by an individual and it can fully explore the island on their own pace kind of decide where they want to go and then you're putting it environment where it becomes something that people watch and I describe it as an experiment because it's kind of throwing all of these different aspects of the government got live music live performance you've got a kind of live puppetry live video game I mean puppetry through me playing video games yes I mean yeah and we will go to. Jail and. So I think that you. When they integrate that fans so really I think it kind of raises a quite a lot of interesting questions about how you can present interactivity on a stage yeah I think it comes up with some interesting answers to those questions but we're going to hear just a little bit of music Jessica the piece I have begun my saints is n.c. Can tell us about what people might be experiencing at this point if the piece of music I think that most people that love the day or at the soundtrack absolutely respond to relate to the music up until this point has been quite sparse and spat and it kind of opens out to the full on sambal and it's just a wonderful moment of warmth and connection after a very meditative and very solitary start so it's a really nice moment in the game. Just a flavor there or the music from Esther live which we're hearing about from Jessica Cohen Thomas Mullen the whole the Saturday basically a video game on streamed live music told us one of the things I'm wondering about is if people want to pop along who haven't played the game and don't know anything about it well they have a less of expediency can they enjoy it knowing nothing about it know in some ways I think it would be really interesting to get people going along that haven't really played games at all because it kind of represents I think games in quite an interesting and accessible way through emphasis on music through you know a lot of voice actor so I mean it be interesting to see if those people really get on with it and you know not knowing anything about games but into in terms of the specific game I mean there's nothing that people need to know before they go in about the story everything is kind of told through the experience itself yeah and I thought you were in Glasgow tramway in November how did do you get a sense of the audience response there yeah it was and that was really fascinating because we had people come along that were kind of music fans that were kind of in it more because it was part of the sonic effect which was kind of sound of so we had a lot of people coming from that they brought some really interesting perspectives to it kind of focus on how you know music onstage can p. Presented when it's connected to something as interactive as a game yeah it's also just interesting to get people to play video games coming out to things with people from different art forms I think it would be a great thing to see from the video game sector is more kind of overlap with different forms yet sensing actually Jessica because those are 2 contrasting venues just thinking about Scotland tramway England's going to. Slightly bigger just a little bit you're talking about you know the popularity of or the game I mean with the tour have been going well are you optimistic or you know networking to any . I don't I'm too negative Oh yeah no I think I'm going back to your question about Glasgow what was really interesting to me is how many young people brought their parents with them because a lot of parents tend to be and I got a teenage son myself can be quite critical of games they happen too much time playing games that they don't offer anything in the melting your brain and the rest is kind of become misspeak and of the pv young people who go I really want to show my parents that games can do something different they can be so imaginative and profound and they can speak of what it is to be human and I think me what we were trying to do so in terms of audience reaction that was really enjoying having people my age and older come up to me say I never knew a game could be like this. And it'll be really interesting to present it in a much bigger space and it changes every night anyway as Thomas was saying he kind of he has the power he is the master and his decisions on the evening a subtly changing the experience that the audience gets I know tonight it's ever the same and that's something that's really interesting to me and the way that Thomas plays really effects the way the conductor is respond and then the way the musicians are responding to the conduct so it's kind of like this instant feedback which is really fascinating I know that quite a few people are coming more than once the super fans so be interesting to hear their reaction as well to fail how the different holes change the experience and just those little you know there's that changes that happen on every show I mean Thomas certainly in Scotland and beyond Scott and I knew that there's a lot of collaboration going on here between different art forms and we've seen the real rise in the whole virtual reality stuff going on a heck of a lawyer experimenting with that too how do you think this fits into do you think you are in a waste of stumbling upon or perhaps not so much stumbling to creating a new kind of art form with us I think your virtual reality was brought into this it would be interesting because playing it I guess the b a I did level of physicality you know you probably see me flailing about. On stage a bit more not sure anyone wants to pay money for but. But but yeah I don't know virtualities an interesting one because I think it's so new and a lot of the kind of grammars of how. People just making stuff or virtuality let alone thinking about it as a type of performance is so kind of fresh that it's difficult to say how it could be woven into just like a concert hall venue Yeah but as you say Jessica I guess a big key is exactly the beauty of this the beauty of the visuals the beauty of the music and that's going to be quite a surprise for a lot folk who sent have a idea of just being 1st person shooters Yeah absolutely and I would say if you've never played a game come along you know if you love beats a full classical music you love film you're inspired by a good story just come along and give it a go because I think it's so new no one is really doing this at the moment and I think it's a chance to be there at the vanguard of something really experimental and ready and like I say the people of calm the feedback has been so beautiful like when we 1st did it at the Barbican. There was just this silence when the game finished I just you know in the awful way as a creator it's what everybody hates fear for this mobile is in the audience and then everyone just started rapturously applauding and it was one of those moments where I think it was so overwhelming the experience and so immersive for Paypal It reminded me I went to a problem like that and it was born Williams and it finished and no one clapped and it was just this almost like this spellbinding moment where you're holding an audience together and that's what I love is that Thomas was saying you know it's often quite a solitary experience playing a game but this is something collective and that's what the best of cinema and the best if they're to does and these collective communal community experiences in the something magical about sitting in and sharing that journey good fun pair they where and that's the composer Jessica Carney and Thomas McMullan journalist to be playing the game dear Esther live on stage this is a live video game as you head at the Asha hole this Saturday for more information just go to the link at my b.b.c. Radio Scotland web page I don't have to click in a link because he's here himself the white bird with news of news drive at 4 o'clock am on the joystick it for president my craw is visiting Britain What's he up to we'll have more on the g.p.s. Contract which was signed today some little g.p.s. Not happy betting on football shorts that is to say football shirts with betting sponsorship on them it's been a big growth area why the weather. I was waiting for the question at all thank you very much indeed dot dot dot thank you very much news drive a sterling listen with the white furred at the helm and other mixed metaphors b.b.c. Radio 4 o'clock until 630 and take it up to 4 o'clock it's time to hear about the Glasgow Film Festival the programme will be launched in Phil next Wednesday this year the film festival runs in Glasgow from the 21st of February until the 4th of March will be here before we know it it seems just last night as Christmas and they were looking ahead to February we're joined by co-directors of the festival Alan Hunter and Allison Gardner to give us an exclusive delve into the program and James 2 and their thought Welcome back to the show Alan and Alison. Good to have you here so it's a program announced in fill in all the details next we get what can you tell us today to tempt the discerning listeners here well I think we're we're both going to choose a film in the program and it will be a world exclusive to you Jan nobody else knows this so if you want me to go 1st tell you the film that I was going to least do with the site herself. There's a film in the program that I love which is called Lucky and it is the the final film from Harry Dean Stanton. And you just really couldn't ask for a finer swan song as a tailor made par is a lead role he's playing 90 year old called Lucky hence type of the film Living in New Mexico or his daily routines he's an atheist and isn't surprisingly good health but is coming to that point of thinking I'm not going to be around much longer what is life mean how do I have a good day and it's funny and it's smart and Harry Dean has never been better than even things that David Lynch acts and he's a costar with the toys called 10 years. About and the directorial debut of America not to John Carroll Lynch you may remember he was March's husband and Fargo he was in the founder recently with Michael Keaton fantastic Well let us share a little bit from Lucky that. Really. Is the brightest of accepting a situation as it is what you're saying is what you see is what you get but what you see. In. The coming along to President Roosevelt escaped was 100 year old taught us a skate overturns option for Howard so I got just. What we found out let's not make a bludgeon out of the sign of concussion know your great even though you smoke you get much exercise of around a long time 5 exercises every day as I am playing the myth is wow I am not sure it is but he does he does a song in Spanish later on I saw him singing in Glasgow he was a great chanter it's going to be poignant seeing how he didn't Stanton so loved very emotional but I sense you know well lovely kind of send off her career yes indeed so that's lucky Glasgow Film Festival Hunter getting that big thumbs up as he would that's being screened on the 25th and 26 February yes absolutely Bobby Dews Oh listen Gardner for sure pick today I have a very different film from Allen my film is called a pin cushion it's the directorial died it to debut of Deborah Haywood it's a mother and daughter story mother. And daughter Iona played by Lily Newmark and join a Skylane in 2 fantastic acting roles they were fair to each other's drafty one in Dufty 2 basis of gothic fairy tale is quite heartbreaking released. To me as the mother of 2 daughters Yes let's agree relationship shows and all that messiness about how they have a great relationship if she's younger but she turns into the teenage years what goes wrong has a very sort of Gothic catty feel to it I thought it was absolutely brilliant I loved every 2nd of it great well that's Allison's choice a pin cushion Let's hear a wee moment from pin cushion. Take. What's going on. In space is the most. Strict somewhere. After. I did that. And I'm making people happy. Love it that was really new Martin Bethany And Tony as I own and Chelsea in pin cushion another debut director there which is great and that screened the film festival in Glasgow the 2627th of February Allen festivals always have themes yours is no different any particular themes this year and interestingly enough I think one of the themes that seems to be a marriage ng and I chime is with our closing gala which is May pass a law which we announced yesterday is just kind of heroic individuals that can make a difference but there are countless films some of which I can't mention of course in which one Paris and sets out to either challenge something to change or law to stand up to someone and I think throughout the film there's that sense you individuals can make a difference individuals can make change and Norm are what you're kind of feeling about the world at the moment despair or despondency or whatever there's a tremendous number of inspirational stories that just make you have a little hope for the future it's funny when that happens do you think this maybe these films have always been made but right now we're kind of absolutely propelling ourselves towards them because we need them I think so I think for the lifeboats they have it here and I think you are in some jumping on board saying thank God for something that may seem very balanced could be could be a friend of mine does either of you pass around we had the filmmaker on here a few weeks ago and that's a great Scottish Chilean story isn't it is absolutely fantastic I mean it's heartwarming it's important it's relevant and nobody will be disappointed when they see it and it really fits the ethos of classical film festival so we couldn't be more delighted to give it a big platform it's what will premiere at the closing we think everybody will have a tremendous evening that's what workers standing up for their principles and supporting absolutely their brothers the other side of the world when you don't know what the consequences are going to be it's done this people. Doing the things for the right reasons. We don't have too much time but I think you should be showing some classic films and interesting Glasgow settings can you maybe send a lie to me say much about what I don't know we always do there are some about that let's just say there are some fantastic if I have coming up yeah in which you will be whisked to places that you don't normally see films and experience films in the way that you perhaps don't have the chance to experience them the rest of the year yeah the school disco I mean essentially this is me trying to relive my youth clueless and breakaways girl and a big school disco so that's going to be fantastic night that's going to sell it quickly and yes a certain age that's for sure I'm going to have to leave it there I think unless and else you want to suddenly tell me I'm rebel heroes retrospective I want to get lots of free movies celebrating Paul Newman and Steve McQueen and and the king himself Elvis Presley I was showing Jailhouse Rock brilliant thank you both very much indeed and else and goto the Glasgow Film Festival through program will be announced a week today tickets go on sale the following Monday and it's on next next month another day if you died of course after the 15th of September the v.n.a. Dundee Scotland's 1st design museum will open to the public on Monday don't forget I'll be back with my Celtic Connections unplugged showcase but take us to news Dr Phil white for does he just had their jailhouse rock the Glasgow Film Festival got to play it with that. Way John. Slid. Down jail. Trombone. Let me. See. Those. Clubs. To break. On Digital Radio $92.00 to $95.00 and each one will be dealing with b.b.c. Radio still.

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Definitely not going to get hung or decided you're free to go that was the Hammonds real performed by members of the Australian. That events and Julian Thompson and they're going to be performing at the Royal Festival Hall on Friday in a program of Barca Mozart and a cost conscious to cope which who knows maybe that'll be an uncle who can tell now though you're listening to in tune it's time for the b.b.c. News read by. To reason may has invited party leaders to help draw up plans to tackle sexual abuse and harassment at Westminster a list of unverifiable allegations against 40 Tory M.P.'s has been widely circulated it includes claims about consensual relationships as well as allegations of sexual harassment at Prime Minister's Questions Mrs May was challenged about her knowledge of claims that party whips had used reports of abuse to demand the loyalty of M.P.'s instead of dealing with the issues she's promised to look again at the issue Police in New York say a man who drove into pedestrians and cyclists last night killing 8 people was following instructions laid out by the Islamic state group they say Saif half an immigrant from as Pakistan had spent weeks planning the attack the or far to say say path was radicalized in the us but President Trump has declared he wants to terminate a visa lottery scheme which allowed him to enter the country in 2010 the Electoral Commission has begun an investigation into whether the prominent breaks it campaign are in banks breached campaign finance rules during the e.u. Referendum the former Ukip donor has strongly denied claims that Russian money was used to fund believe campaign. The amount of money spent on agency social workers across the u.k. Has doubled in the past 5 years as Council struggle to recruit and retain permanent staff a Freedom of Information request by the b.b.c. Has found that spending rose from 180000000 pounds in 201-2132 more than 350000000 in the last financial year the figures are for both adult and Children Services an inquiry into the experiences of people affected by the Hillsborough disaster says a change in culture is needed in public bodies to address what it calls the burning injustice of the way they were treated the report which was commissioned after the inquest for the $96.00 Liverpool fans who died in 1909 was written by the former Bishop of Liverpool James Jones he also supports the introduction of a Hillsborough law which would make it a criminal offense for public officials to cover up wrongdoing labor is making a fresh attempt to force the government to publish document which set out the likely impact of Bracks said on the British economy and peace will vote to see evening on whether the $58.00 papers covering sectors including advertising aerospace agriculture textiles and tourism should be released the government says that would weaken its hand in negotiations in the city $100.00 share index closed down 6 at 7004 $188.00 tomorrow's weather after morning fog in the south has cleared it'll be cloudy but mostly dry in Wales and the English Midlands more sunshine is expected elsewhere especially in northern part of the u.k. B.b.c. News and weather at 3 minutes past 6 Luke thank you now all of those of you who have been busy composing for this year's breakfast Carol competition don't forget the deadline for sending in your entries is turn ite midnight so too late now to send in the by post but you can of course still upload your entries online by visiting the breakfast web page say do that please now that heron and she and let's have something from a new desk of handle. And for once a day is. More than a little. Air. With. Good. Old old old ladies. And homely. Old girl a liver. Or live. Or are. These. More made. Her the girl. Or 88. pm. More than. A. They certainly heard good week. Long. Live. On the Trail of the. Sailor Moon. The old air. Or was. A man a. Nurse. Or. Were. On. Board. A. That was a metal man singing some handle that from Act 2 of out scene out that was in it though say you know my heart you go on from a new cd out last Friday the 27th of October. Now that in all its new support is growing in the musical world to save the city of Edom or music school at our city council has proposed closing the school and redistributing the money to schools across the region and supporters argue that Edinburgh needs a center of musical excellence they've pointed out some of Scotland's best known musicians a former pupils of the school including composer Alan grime jazz saxophonist Tommy Smith and. Bennett and charity foundation is backing the campaign to save the school so we will keep you posted and the death has been announced of the Czech American composer a lot is left to pick at the age of 71 a graduate of the Prague Academy of Music soon as stablished himself as an international Luckily recognized composer he received commissions from the Salzburg Festival the Czech Music Fund and. Taught at the Prague in server tree and then he moved to the United States where he was Professor of Composition at Florida State's one of America's leading composer competitions is named in his honor so to honor him as well this is the 1st movement of his Piano Concerto Number 3. And it said there from the 1st movement of panic she had a number 3 performed by Reed Gainsford with the Bruno film on a caucus track conducted by Alexander human there is and composed by Ladislav Vick who died last week. Now as a pianist having your cd described as magnificent by Martha Argerich must be pretty much the pinnacle of praise that's exactly what happened to my next guest has a minority whose cd of music by Granada us has just gone in straight at number one in the specialist classic charts Jose congratulations thank you very much it's very exciting Now this whole project has been a real labor of love go yes gas tell us what go yes got it well yes because he is one of the most important in the works for a piano I would say one of the most important spine is what it is whether it's also one of the most one of the biggest essential Romantic works in general and it was full of Venter through to make this leave because it's actually is the result of one year of touring with another leader or yes with by those other smaller related works that are in the cd to. Full revision of the suite that means there's a whole lot to explain and we will talk more for sure about it it's a really interesting story I know you've thrown yourself into the research and study and read in the family and of thing but we're going to hear you play a little bit of it 1st and the 1st piece we're going to hear is called the straw man tell me about it well this is this is actually the only piece that is really based bitter and it's not part of there were discussed with us sometimes it has been told what is not is is said well yes can't be just were not part of the means we've done is just the big Peter of. A group of people are Munda ling up with a straw man which apparently was funny seeing in the time of the year and so this is his musical interpretation of it has a minimal please we'd love to hear it so not part of his is that the sweet but from this new number one cd This is what they may not. With. Bored bored. Bored. 'd or walk or are. The. Poor. RINGBACK Poor. Poor. Poor. RINGBACK BUSY BUSY BUSY BUSY poor. Poor. Poor poor the. Iraq. War or the. Poor. That was good enough. A straw man from Jose menorahs new cd of music by Granada us out on the i.b.s. Classical label I'm going to have more a more chat and more playing I'm happy to say a not just a few minutes before that we've got it for you. Yes. And. The 2nd movement voice string quintets and Eve flat major that was a powerhouse quartet. Making up number 5 and that's another new cd came out last week and doing very well in the charts also. Breaking free a century of Russian culture. The b.b.c. Radio 3 explores the cultural legacy of the Russian Revolution 100 years old over 2 weeks that we music born of rebellion but harnessed by the state music that praised the collective topia force for individuality Shostakovich Rahman off sucks just the stuff out there's so much news. Breaking Free century of Russian culture on b.b.c. Legacy the good news and somebody else to move up folks. And to get us in the mood for the Russian season has a Russian folk tune called little that was popular with both sides during the civil war following the revolution the Bolshevik whites include the lines hey Apple colored red I will marry him the handsome lad not Lenin or Trotsky but a young read. Ult. . Little Apple there traditional The Russians song performed by author of Your And you can hear all festival concert by at our your in world on 3 later in the month part of the breaking free a century of Russian culture. Because I know my guest is still with me now Jose you played that wonderful piece or Granada's from your new cd just a few minutes ago for us and we started to talk about this project this scenes from Goa project but tell me a little bit more about how you 1st became fascinated by it and also all the different research that went into putting it all together well I mean I've always been fascinated by the music of the others and some of these pieces of him being the my whole life now. But it was a progressive thing not only with just as well with the whole grandmother's repertoire many years ago I approached the I mean about then you're saying or more I approached the violin sonata of it and I was with colleague New York with his colleague and there we found I say gone for 4 movements that were not published we found the minus grades they were incomplete so there really fascinated me another 5 finding. That they're not bubblies that they're incomplete so then we left the browser Gleg in our stand by a few years after I met but what I got and others there in their grade and those that are of the composer and then I met more members of the family and they've been always very supportive so we continued doing more research on other pieces and then we'd go yes because it had been something very very very funny you know away which is I was recalling I see the need to leave with a different label a different project that they were gay My because a lot of us it was gumming up and I was recording the some movements of well yes because their one was hired to sing over the thing I'm going to play in a few minutes I think so I was surprised because that particularly I was not very inspiring like how I was playing and I decided to go on listen one b.n. Are all right and I was playing himself with some of them are. And you see the final line and my surprise was huge when I saw that there were called some melodies that they was not playing and they were not printed in the score I was using so I thought the Regarding I flew straight the world to learn through the music of the music that has many many Mother years where you and others and I take their their fax email there are 2 versions there of the facsimile and actually I thought wow this is amazing and so the composer wrote something that is completely different than what they would bring so that was a few years ago was the beginning of research that they've been doing and then I found that there are more let's say it Oriel inconsistency. And there in other pieces especially is in la my hand in a pillow especially but well I mean I was fascinated by the whole world so when I started performing anything during January 2016 with the anywhere so there was the only battery of it and I was I started out playing the things that they found the friends in the mine was creating and there is then well it's a big piece of it grows with you and also now is is the legacy but the family must have been delighted that you were writing all the wrongs you know you're finding the mistakes put in the right and then creating recreating the great grandfather's work correctly Well I mean it's always. Been like that we saw that they go together yes I mean it's a little bit surprising at least that there are clear examples that I mean I have been published 100 printed under bring them in a way that it's not what the composer wrote for the end you as yourself I mean why am I playing a composer very long play where he wrote so yes I mean there the family has been very supportive all the time and then not only with this project but also with other projects because I was there I see them be a nice 4 legged and I was and he was 30 years younger I was birthplace in the there was they give a full commission for the anywhere studies and I've been playing most of his piano works and also all the chamber works so they've always been. For. Now I think we're. Going to. Win this in let's hear this next piece which is Ok. Let's hear it has I thank you so much this is translated as complaints Oh the maiden and the nightingale by get an address. The poor. Poor. Poor the. 'd old. Or or. The. The. Or the old. The old. Girl. The. Poor. Or when. You're. More like. Or are. Or are. The are. The or READY. Or are. The. Well it's a beautiful piece that deserves to be heard much more often I think that was the maiden. Before my guests thank you very beautiful piece. That's the one that you were playing when you realize that you could find someone. Tell me you've been playing the piano. Perhaps but was there anything that you do you have that you could be anything else to do to play. Well I mean it sort of happened I mean I don't even know now what you know it's sort of helping me I truly have been very very suddenly. When things professional studies music studies. I remember there's an anecdote they're going to explain if you want I mean I remember I was like 9 years old and I was playing scenes 7 and I was already a little bit bored of it and considering giving up so one day a piano tuner very very nice lady came to my from my house through the little piano here then you know what's a loner and is your play me something and he played to bring grandpa and his friend because that's what they was you know but the moment it already then or even. Probably a play very badly Well I mean even I think it shows something know so well she liked it very mad so immediately she was my reply conductor receiver me to him I started playing for people and immediately started studying other guns out there in Barcelona so it was and the name of this girl was because the no go if it wasn't for her I wouldn't continue the music Thank you Christina. But you don't just play now you compose as well yes and you are saying that you just performed one of your works in Seville that the weekend is this the direction you want to concentrate on what do you think what I want to compose more and more is something that they've always than a slogan position as well and it's something that they really I really love it so it's very difficult because when you're playing you're always learning different repertoire you're busy I mean it's very even for mental spaces very difficult to have and I was on Beethoven and we get the mc and the mine and then on top of that composer if you go about trying my best to get more time. Well we've got time for one more piece from the good and out of scenes from going or this one's called the complements tell us about this particular work well yeah a lot of give as well as the 1st one that starts the sweet it's it's this one is so . Of inspired by. Drawing by go yeah. Well which is it shows the flair thing it's called the Fred thing and then I mean it's not the script they've been using is there yes this is not descriptive uses and is an aberration is I me and the reason I'm sorry but this one is still very is the 1st number so it's very very tonal it's based on a theme by at one of the from the 18th century and then well it's sort of a very very happy b. Is probably one of the longest in there in this week except for I'm where I'm with the thing and grow gear and then yeah for me or for me it's important because the being of the suite and I see this with as a cycle that goes from a very very very don't know happy positive music which is this piece to their death of the character and they get it they're still singing his beloved after he's a ghost in the last piece which is very interesting with you know it's a complete harmony war he meant it so yeah it's is the beginning of the cycles Perfect Well it's funny to end on the beginning but let's hear it now because I know thank you so much so this is as you say the start of the the cycle this is called the complements from a painting by going called flirting and this is it not. Or are. Poor. Poor. The old. The borer. You're. The. You're. Old. Or are poor. Poor. Poor. Poor. Poor old. 'd the. Or are. Or are. The. The the. The. The. The old. The old. Tremendous finale there from a cause imma know if you so much that was the complements from from the scenes suite the 1st piece in that and Jose's new cd of music by Granada is out on the i.b.s. Classical label because I thank you very much in days been lovely to meet you and thank you very much. Breaking free a century of Russian culture next Tuesday reduce 3 marks 100 years to the day of the October Revolution by heading to the city where the uprising began seeing Petersburg Brecht 1st comes love from the historic Merion city the attack in the heart of the city from half past 6 back in Britain will be in Lenin's London office for music and discussion with a panel of experts 2 and on and children will have a futuristic sounding Soviet invented there are many in the studio that's from 5 breaking free a century of Russian culture continues next Tuesday here on b.b.c. Radio 3 so much good stuff to come now listen Valerie Lang failed who also happens to be an expert on the composer Roger quilter has emailed us to remind us that today is his birthday he was born in $877.00 so that Mike's today his 140th birthday Well of course it would have been if he hadn't died in 153 Roger quilter best known for his songs but Valerie reminds us that he also wrote some beautiful pieces too so let's hear one of them this is his rainbow land from his music for the children's play where the Rainbow ends. Oh lovely gentle moment that was Roger Quayle to whose birthday would have been today that was his occasional piece where the Rainbow ends from his music for the children's play at the Rainbow and in fact the visit but peace was called rainbow land the northern Sinn Fein year of England was conducted by Richard Cox. Now don't forget that's in concert tonight at half past 7 comes from snake melting and features some of Kima playing Britain's piano concerto with the b.b.c. Concert orchestra music by Copeland and Vaughan Williams as well. But before then it certain for the into mixtape every day at this time there is a carefully crafted half an hour selection of uninterrupted music and we've got music tonight by Mendelssohn by j.s. Bach father in law Mahler but we're going to begin with a ballet score by catch a cherry and this is masquerade which takes us to a salon in.

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