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Love Your Weekend with Alan Titchmarsh - Season 7 Episode 26

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00:02:45I was there I think I had to go do something with the bins as you do went out close the back door and realized I couldn't see anything
00:02:52It was completely pitch dark there was no street lights everything and I was literally patting my way around the side of the house to try and find the door back in
00:03:00Have you been uncomfortable ever seeing us?
00:03:01Very uncomfortable
00:03:02David I wouldn't think of you as a countryman really because I suppose because of your life and it's very much been up in the bright lights and you seem like a city man
00:03:10Are you a city man?
00:03:11Yeah I was born in Canning Town in West Ham and we moved from when my little boy was born he's 11 now we thought we need to get out of London so we got this country house and I had a window box in Covent Garden and it's got four acres is the house so that became traumatic because I didn't know you know what that plant does what does that do
00:03:41Because we moved in like very early spring so I didn't know what was going to come out and what was and I do the garden with another son and it's a bit like Lauren Hardy
00:03:51We don't know what we're doing but we do it you know cutting the hedges and going up ladders and it's a big adventure but it is fantastic
00:03:59I mean the British countryside is just the best isn't it stunning
00:04:03Yeah
00:04:03Now Thelma I mean you've got your feet firmly I remember coming to see your garden in Yorkshire a good few years ago now
00:04:09But you wrote gardening books so although you might you live in Kent now I know but countryside is is your territory as well isn't it
00:04:17Yeah and thinking about it when I was three we moved from the town to the country in North Yorkshire
00:04:24And I was we left it when I was six to go and live in another town but that had a memories of that so strong
00:04:32And I think from there on I'd caught the bug and those memories from being young they do stick with you don't they I mean particularly David
00:04:40You're very much associated with the 70s and to prove that you're associated look at this
00:04:45Oh I have here David Essex rock on
00:04:49Love light turn me loose on and on to all they're all here and which of course then you're far too young to remember
00:04:56I don't think I bought that
00:04:56Did you
00:04:57Um no born 90 uh 1966 so
00:05:00All right
00:05:01Yeah one of my earliest memories is asking my dad what year it was and him saying 1971
00:05:07Uh shortly before I swallowed a five pence piece
00:05:11And he had to hold me upside as you did in the 70s
00:05:14Held me upside down by my legs and beat me on my back until I coughed it back up again
00:05:20Well you checked the date then
00:05:21Yeah yeah and I checked the date on the coin and he was right
00:05:23Well you're big time so because 70 71 that you joined coronation that's right yes
00:05:31I'd done years and years of theater before because there was lovely reps there you could play all sorts of wonderful great training ground
00:05:39And by then uh coronation street came up for one episode
00:05:43And uh then it went on for two episodes a year later they were trying me out
00:05:48And then about a year later it was three but it meant leaving glasgow eventually my marriage had just broken down
00:05:55So it was an ideal timing really to move to manchester
00:05:59Did it save you for you then really
00:06:00Yes
00:06:011,700 episodes later she decided she'd probably had enough
00:06:05But the man sitting between you two the 70s I mean it was david essex decade
00:06:11I mean you're still going I know but such a sensational time
00:06:16And then I just thought from your point of view was it a good time to be in that business well
00:06:21It was a bit like a grey blur
00:06:23Yeah
00:06:23You know you know there was so much going on there was there was films and theater and big hit records and everything concerts
00:06:32It was like the concerts it was like being in the sas getting in and out of venues
00:06:37extraordinary climbing over roofs and
00:06:41To avoid fans who were about to pull bits off you
00:06:44Well I remember in liverpool empire we played two shows and the people from the first show stayed outside
00:06:51So there were probably about
00:06:546 000 people outside and they said i remember this policeman said
00:06:59What we're going to do is we're not going to go out the stage door we're going to go out this exit all right
00:07:05Put this on this sort of semi uniform so i put that on
00:07:09He said just go to the lamb rover and we'll take to the police station
00:07:14I said okay great and i had these sparkly red shoes on
00:07:19So the door opened and they went there he is
00:07:21So he picked me up used me as a battering ram through the crowd
00:07:29And i had to stay in the police station for till four in the morning before i could get out it was unbelievable
00:07:36Partnerships are important then they're important to all three of you with armstrong i'm a little particularly
00:07:40So that was that was early on so to have that that friendship that as you say almost a sort of reinforcements
00:07:47Were important and you with you know rita and with peter baldwin in coronation street but also with anne reed
00:07:53I mean in dinner ladies the two of you sparred so brilliantly yeah
00:07:58Well she is a friend and was a friend yeah before we were in it but
00:08:01But uh yes we really enjoyed working together it's this funny thing of suddenly there are people that you really get
00:08:08Kind of it's not that's a feeling isn't there when you get to meet people
00:08:12Sometimes that you know you're going to be friends
00:08:15I mean partnerships frank finley when i did mutiny
00:08:19Yeah you come from up north and he came from up north and uh
00:08:24He was a lovely lovely man so giving yes because it was a very physical show with the dancing and climbing up ropes and all the rest of it
00:08:32And he was he was so energetic and so much his belief was
00:08:38Really terrific in mutiny
00:08:40And and then the other partnership was really my first manager derrick bowman who was like a mentor
00:08:47Who believed in me more than i did you know and was with me from the age of 16
00:08:52Right the way through without with good luck wasn't it we all need people who can see in us what we can't see ourselves
00:08:58Don't we tell you what you could do you know and and if you wise you listen and and have a go we could carry on talking like this
00:09:06In fact we will when do we eat the cakes
00:09:11Any second now more from selma david and ben later now now help yourself here you are to today's plethora
00:09:18We have all kinds of things here uh still to come he's back from me's honeymoon and ready to roll up his sleeves
00:09:23Jamie butterworth here with his guide to sprucing up your outdoor space ready for winter and with their distinct floppy ears and playful personalities
00:09:31It's no wonder they're a hit on this show farmer tom davis is back with his latest herd of quirky anglo nubian goats
00:09:38Only on love you weekend i'll be back with tom and his ratings winners right after this the moment i've given david essex on the barlow
00:09:47And ben miller a toasted tea cake oh yes no expense has been spent very good
00:09:53And i'll be back with you guys
00:10:07countryside is full of delicious seasonal flavors wild mushrooms chestnuts apples blackberries i'm
00:10:15licking my lips at the thought of apple and blackberry crumble with a dollop of cornish clotted cream coming up
00:10:21A man who never disappoints he's played a sidekick to a special agent and even lived on the same street as paddington bear
00:10:28Award-winning actor ben miller on his wicked new fairy tale
00:10:32And he'll be treating us to a reading too
00:10:34And spicing up our lives as only he can rum ambassador ian burrell road tests his latest spice infused rum cocktails
00:10:43I mean it'd be rude not to wouldn't it
00:10:46Time now to welcome a very special livestock breed that's close to our hearts here at love you weekend
00:10:51Known for their floppy ears cheeky personalities and a knack for stealing the spotlight it's safe to say
00:10:58Anything could happen in the next 10 minutes the anglo-nubian goats are back in town here with geraldine
00:11:05Gladys and georgina welcome back tom davis from mud shoot farm they have a unique look don't they the
00:11:13Floppy ears the roman nose head on one side yeah looking frankly hello tell me i'm beautiful
00:11:20They're a fantastically characterful breed and and those ears
00:11:24Are when they're first born
00:11:26Those ears can be as long as their legs in some cases so they have a massive cute factor and these two are
00:11:32twin sisters
00:11:34So what we try and do at the farm is keep them in their maternal family group so the females mothers and daughters
00:11:41Sisters will all stay together throughout their life as a breeding herd on the farm as a group happy family life
00:11:47Yeah
00:11:47Tell us about the history of the anglo-nubian i mean when when did it originate well
00:11:51They're they're a result of crossing sort of various different breeds of goat
00:11:55But a lot of that development took place here in the uk and they're a dairy breed
00:12:00So they're famed for this high high yielding animals that we see now today with
00:12:05Females from good milking lines producing over three kilos of milk in a 24-hour period at peak yielding
00:12:12And they have become a very large framed goat as we can see by this lovely
00:12:16Big lady out the front here the brown one
00:12:18She's a bit more mature than than what these two are
00:12:21But the adult females can weigh up to 110 kilos, but they're a fantastic
00:12:28Goat for temperament some people say they're a bit like divas a bit demanding
00:12:33But you know there they love a fuss they love a cuddle
00:12:38And they make fantastic pets as well, you know
00:12:40Well whenever you bring yours to my shoot farm
00:12:42They used to being handled and I love them because they're always so friendly when they come and they'll they'll give you
00:12:46Hello, it's me. You know we're back
00:12:48There you are just like this
00:12:49It just makes it so much easier when we're handling them when we've got children or young adults that have got various different needs
00:12:55You know to have animals that are quiet and used to people around them
00:12:59It makes it a lot a lot better and a lot more of a friendly environment
00:13:02But you know the breed naturally has a good temperament which helps you know, so it's fantastic
00:13:09You're saying they make good pets as a term you presume you'd never keep them singly you always want company
00:13:13Never never you would always as with any of the sort of domestic herbivores
00:13:18You would always want them to be in a pair
00:13:21Minimum, but if you can have a group then more's the better because goats are mischief makers
00:13:27And they you can spend hours
00:13:30Watching their antics especially when they're young you can bend down to change their water bucket
00:13:34And they'll be on your shoulders on your back nibble in your coat and stuff like that so they are brilliant now
00:13:40Goats are famously browsers they don't just graze they eat you know shrubs trees
00:13:44Whatever they can get their their hands on they need presumably a supplementary diet as well
00:13:49Yes, so you'll feed them a complete goat mix as well as ad-lib hay good quality meadow hay is preferred
00:13:55And then as well ensuring that you know what you're picking and you're allowed to pick it
00:14:00You can get some trimmings
00:14:02Native species willow hawthorn fruit trees are perfect
00:14:07Yeah, and they add that that browse to their diet and if you've got them in a paddock with hedging around
00:14:13They will keep the hedge on their side of the paddock nice and flush and trim
00:14:18You can trim my edges for me come in trouble trim the rest of the garden as well
00:14:21So now the one thing you do have to do with them is trim their hooves
00:14:24I know because they grow quite quickly don't they?
00:14:26They do I mean you can there's a sort of two schools of thought with this one is that you leave them until you may see them
00:14:33Being a little bit lame or whatever else like that or the other one is you trim them every six to eight weeks
00:14:38And because we have a lot of volunteers and work experience placements at the farm
00:14:42One of the things that we do is provide that training for them
00:14:45So we will teach people how to trim the feet and we've got quite a large number of goats to practice on
00:14:50Yeah, well show us what you're doing. Let's have a look. So we've got a set of foot trimmers here. This is a
00:14:56Set of foot trimmers here. That's what I call them secateurs. Yes, so very similar
00:15:00So you could use them as a pair you get some of these as the secateurs for for trimming bits and pieces
00:15:04And then we'll see if she'll go this way a little bit and we'll pick this foot up here
00:15:09Now it's always important when you're trimming goats feet or any animals feet that you don't bring it up outside of its
00:15:14It's it's flecks of motion. So you want to bend down to her level
00:15:19These outside hooves bits of the hoof always grow in and the sole is flat against it there
00:15:24So what we do is we come down all the way in one continuous
00:15:29Cut
00:15:29It's like cutting your fingernails exactly that exactly that so you trim it all the way back
00:15:34Making sure that you you go back to the right sort of level
00:15:38But you don't need to go too deep. No, no, you don't want to go too deep because as with everything they have
00:15:44They have the quick there. So we'll take a little bit off the front here
00:15:48Like that and there
00:15:51And that is her
00:15:54Done so there we go
00:15:55For another six to eight weeks. Six to eight weeks. Yeah, and it does help you know
00:15:59Obviously in the winter if you have them on harder standing
00:16:03Because they don't like being in mud and then you'll get a whole range of foot problems
00:16:07So what we tend to do is during the winter our goats will be on concrete hard standing
00:16:11So that's where it's better to have them on in the winter because also that wears the feet down
00:16:15I'm going to say that gradually sands them down
00:16:17So they'll produce milk for how long well that it depends on the they have to have kids obviously to produce the milk
00:16:22So once they've had the kids their lactation does vary depending on what you do
00:16:26Because if you take the kids off of them and you have to hand milk them
00:16:30You can extend the length of time that your that your goat is lactating
00:16:34But if you leave the kids on them then obviously the nannies will wean them
00:16:37Themselves so you know all depends really what you want to do with the milk wonderful
00:16:42Well, lovely to meet you again girls Gladys, Georgina and Geraldine as well behaved as ever and coming over for a cuddle
00:16:49Thank you Tom. You're welcome
00:16:50I've always had a delight still to come whether he's a bumbling spy
00:16:54You got a cough enjoy English a titular criminologist in professor tea or a slightly disturbed survival fanatic in doc martin
00:17:02Everything he does seems to turn to gold ben miller takes us on an unforgettable journey with his latest fairy tale page turner
00:17:10I'll see you with Ben for some literary chit chat and more right after this
00:17:14Welcome back to love your weekend coming up. We're living the life of Riley with babies Riley
00:17:35Corrie legend, Thelma Barlow and everything from selling penny chews in the cabin with Rita to discussing nose with husband Derek to a saucy liaison with
00:17:45Victor Pendlebury. Remember him
00:17:47But first it's time to turn our sights to the southwest and one of the most colorful spectacles to fill the skies there each year
00:17:56The Bristol international balloon fiesta brings together hundreds of hot air balloonists to create a breathtaking aerial display
00:18:04We join the teams on the ground as they prepared for their mass ascent
00:18:19Oh look at that
00:18:23That opens the 47 international balloon fiesta
00:18:28I've been ballooning since Buddha found enlightenment around about 38 years now
00:18:33Bristol is is a unique balloon festival because we're about one of the only free festivals in the world
00:18:41And we want to uphold that ethos really for the people of Bristol
00:18:46Firstly this is the home certainly in Europe of modern hot air ballooning
00:18:51I'm not sure if Don will like this but Don Cameron he's the grandfather he's ballooning royalty if you like
00:18:56Glaswegian came to Bristol as an aeronautical engineer and then with his mates he started
00:19:00Building their first hot air balloon the Bristol belt
00:19:04He was talking in the pub to a load of his mates one evening about an adventure that he'd done flying across the Atlantic
00:19:10And they decided wouldn't it be great to host a balloon festival
00:19:14We started in 1979 it's quite a small affair
00:19:19About a dozen balloons and the only thing we had on site was a chuck wagon which gave us some hamburgers or something
00:19:27There was nothing else so it's grown to almost a small town that you see today
00:19:35So the launch field here does get very congested and we we all have to be very careful obviously as we're inflating
00:19:42We get a strong gust it does become uncontrollable we've got about three tons of hot air
00:19:49And when it wants to move with the wind behind it it moves
00:19:54When one balloon takes off and another one next to it you've got to be aware that there's probably going to be a balloon above you
00:20:00So we all talk to each other on radios and make sure that we we don't crash into each other
00:20:08But it's a real spectacle when you see a lot of balloons taking off together because it just fills the sky with colour
00:20:19Let it in a bit Hannah
00:20:23So my daughter Hannah she's a balloon pilot she's been flying with me since she was three years old
00:20:28To be taught by your dad is pretty special I mean most people get taught learn how to drive a car by their parents
00:20:34I got taught by my dad to fly her air balloon I think it's pretty great
00:20:38The balloon flying flying today is named after my daughter Clara Leray
00:20:42I am hoping one day she does what to become a pilot if she wants to and she will be the third generation
00:20:53So hot air balloons fly literally because we heat the air in the balloon with our propane burners
00:21:00The hotter you make the air inside the balloon the lighter it becomes than the outside air if you like
00:21:07And that enables us to fly to go up if you let the balloon cool then of course the balloon will start to come down
00:21:14Yeah weather-wise we have very calm winds this morning on the surface
00:21:19Which is absolutely what we like as balloonists
00:21:23We can't control where balloons go apart from with the wind
00:21:27But as you climb and descend the wind changes in direction so we can use that as a little bit of steering
00:21:3480 odd balloons and they're all doing exactly the same as you but maybe in a slightly different air current
00:21:43Occasionally the envelopes might just bump together very gently like that and then part again
00:21:49Then you can talk to the other ockukun in the other basket
00:21:53There's no other way to describe it
00:21:55It's been graceful and peaceful and uplifting
00:21:59What an awesome sight amazing now my next guest is an award-winning actor both on the small screen
00:22:11And the silver screen he's a comedian now celebrated author you might say he's a triple threat
00:22:18But when it comes to lying ben miller's talents are dubious to say the least
00:22:23Um aside from my friend mark park i have
00:22:30Can't think we can end it there
00:22:36I have three other good friends whose names run
00:22:40I have to ask you for the names of the friends very quickly
00:22:51You take your time you take your time
00:22:57Richard Pritchard
00:22:59You need two more
00:23:18Dave clave
00:23:21Yeah
00:23:27Angie rangy
00:23:32You are rubbish
00:23:33I mean you didn't even try and lie
00:23:35Do you know what the show's called?
00:23:38Would I lie to you?
00:23:38In my defence the great thing about that game is it doesn't matter how bad you are at lying because you could be bluffing
00:23:43You could
00:23:44So actually uh in the actual show i mean it looks like i'm about to be destroyed
00:23:50But i was so bad at lying that they thought i had to be bluffing
00:23:55It's it's hilarious going on there i've been all right with myself
00:23:58Just watching the two of them david mitchell and and lee sparring with one another you just want to sit there and watch
00:24:05It's so fast lee mac is so quick i mean it wasn't in the clip but when i said dave clave he said
00:24:11Please tell me you met him at a rave
00:24:15The trouble is now you have so many strings to your bow i'm not sure you know quite which one you're pulling at the time as it were
00:24:23Because aside from the acting of which more in the moment you've now become did you know you're one of the top 10
00:24:28Best-selling children's authors that's amazing it's lovely isn't it really wonderful yeah i really really do love
00:24:36Writing the children's books we were chatting a bit before
00:24:39Um we started weren't we and i think the this age of reader
00:24:45So sort of six seven to about 12 are just the most amazing readers to write for their their imaginations are so
00:24:53Are so fully formed and they crave sort of real excitement and adventure in this
00:25:00And they're sort of not tainted by cynicism at that age no cynicism at all it's really really wonderful
00:25:05It's also the most discerning audience so do you show it to your own children you i do yeah
00:25:10They're brilliant uh to try things out with uh particularly with these stories the fairy tale wood stories because they're based on fairy tales
00:25:16My first question is always what are your favorite fairy tales yeah tell me what you know about your favorite fairy tales
00:25:23Which of your fairy tales would you like to hear in a diary which the characters would you like to learn more about and the great thing about
00:25:29And what you think about a fairy tale is it it gives a a child that genuine experience of um
00:25:38Facing a real threat and overcoming it so this there's this story dying of a wicked witch is about the witch from rapunzel and you think about that story
00:25:45So that's a mother who keeps her daughter
00:25:49Imprisoned in a tower
00:25:51And climbs up and down the tower on her daughter's hair and you think what could that possibly be about?
00:25:59Well, it's really really interesting because
00:26:01The mother it's a it's the story of a sort of an overprotective mother isn't it really give us a little sample
00:26:08Okay, so reading from so I've got to sort of set this up a little bit really so
00:26:12Basically when our witch who's wendy imprisons her daughter rapunzel in this tower and climbs up and down via her hair
00:26:19Um she comes to the notice of the fairy tale woods police
00:26:24Um and she's given a choice either you're going to jail or you're going to go on a uh wickedness awareness course
00:26:34Um which bears a certain resemblance to a certain type of course you might go on if you're caught speeding
00:26:42And you want to avoid points
00:26:44So this is the exciting moment where the witches meet their facilitator for the first time
00:26:52When I arrived our facilitator had put a plate of gingerbread on a table with five chairs placed around it in a circle
00:27:00There were three other witches there gertrude was one of them to her left was the sea witch
00:27:05Celia I think she's called lives out at sea most of the time but pops up in our river every now and then to make trouble
00:27:12To be honest, I didn't even know she could walk on dry land
00:27:14To her right was someone I've never even seen before and I couldn't really see now because she was completely cloaked in blankets
00:27:22Baba Yaga I think was her name, but she had a definite air of wickedness coming off her
00:27:28I grabbed a few biscuits and took my seat
00:27:31Everyone okay with gingerbread said our facilitator it's sweet
00:27:35I'm afraid I have some toad slime and batwing bites too if anyone would prefer
00:27:41We all hesitated the truth is no witch really likes the taste of toad slime it's more of a showing off thing really
00:27:48Our facilitator sighed
00:27:50Okay, well, let's just start by saying a little bit about ourselves and why we think we're here today
00:27:57Who'd like to go first?
00:28:01Oh dear, you're there aren't you? You've been to these meetings and lots of witches
00:28:05Clearly um, you know, I feel your background coming out here. I mean, you know the Armstrong and Millivet
00:28:09And and and and this is a kind of paged version of stand-up comedy isn't it is I think there's a reason as a lot of comedians that write
00:28:17children's stories and I think
00:28:19the
00:28:20It's I think it's a personality type
00:28:23I think if you're if you're used to trying to get laughs once you've got a family and you've got kids
00:28:30Most of your time then is spent trying to make your kids laugh. Let's have a look at you in those Armstrong and Millivet days
00:28:34We'll have the uh
00:28:37Fuel consumption, but uh, no, it actually works out fairly economic mile for mile. They have room here, isn't there?
00:28:43Oh, yes. Yes, very spacious the boot can take up to stop it you two
00:28:46Stop it
00:28:48Jennifer you stop teasing your brother. Oliver you stop hitting your sister the pair of you are oh god
00:28:58Oh god
00:29:00Is everyone all right kids? Oliver are you okay? Sandra?
00:29:05Oh Jesus no
00:29:09Sandra?
00:29:10Oh god no
00:29:12Sandra!
00:29:21Um
00:29:22I like it. Do you do a diesel model?
00:29:25I'm on top angry dad. I mean gosh you two you and Alexander I mean sander work hugely well together
00:29:31It was so much fun and it was there from the very sort of moment that we met which was
00:29:36In a sort of sketch comedy club in in Notting Hill
00:29:39And I remember the very first time we stepped on
00:29:42Stage together
00:29:43I actually forgot all the lines in the sketch and people were just sort of laughing at the two of us
00:29:49Just kind of not really knowing what we were meant to be doing
00:29:51That's such a rare gift. I mean you think of Eric Morecambe, Tommy Cooper
00:29:55They'd walk onto a stage
00:29:58You know
00:29:59Yeah, yeah
00:29:59You laughed you just why you couldn't tell why you did
00:30:03No, it's something very uh
00:30:05Is it best not to analyze it too much?
00:30:06It's best not to analyze it. It's best not to think about it
00:30:09The way that life mirrors art and art mirrors life in in your situation though
00:30:13Is very interesting because professor t and we're about to get a new series next spring
00:30:17Yes
00:30:17So it's for a professor t who is OCD and you freely admit you're OCD
00:30:21So I'm doing now look I'm just counting mine really yeah yeah
00:30:25Do you count everything?
00:30:26Yeah, counting it was a sort of session with counting my brain's always sort of counting all the time
00:30:30It's quite
00:30:31Is it helpful or hindrance? I mean can you
00:30:32It's a help in terms of some uh, you know
00:30:36It's a help in writing and seeing patterns and you know
00:30:39It's a help in problem solving or the same thing, you know, it's kind of uh
00:30:44You know, I was always quite mathematical at school and that was very useful to me
00:30:47Um, but it can if it becomes intrusive then it's if it sort of then starts taking over which it can do
00:30:54It's sort of slightly um does it less less comfortable
00:30:58But you're not quite like professor t you don't wear rubber gloves out
00:31:00No, well the thing about professor t is he sort of he sort of
00:31:05Loves his sort of OCD and loves his germaphobia and he
00:31:09Doesn't do anything to mask it or hide it
00:31:12He kind of just sort of co-opts everyone else to become part of it
00:31:15Let's see the trailer for the new series which comes out in spring
00:31:19The memory is not static
00:31:21It is a dynamic
00:31:23Creative process it has the power to soothe it has the power to terrify
00:31:31Six months since di donkers died six months since you last helped the police
00:31:37I am fortune busy
00:31:39DC highsmith
00:31:40You want to get there one chance at a first impression she's certainly done that
00:31:45Jasper if it's your intention to ruin my grand tour you're doing an excellent job
00:31:55Jasper it's so lovely to see you
00:31:57Aunt Zelda why are you here your mother got in touch wasn't convinced kafka's emotional needs were being met
00:32:04So hi i'm lydia i'm his drum teacher
00:32:11Such a great cast and we're getting some of them back juliet stevenson
00:32:16Frankie de la tour
00:32:17But we lost donkers my wife and i were very upset mrs t as opposed to professor t was very upset when donkers
00:32:24Went and i talked to you afterwards and said has she really gone you said yes curtains for donkers
00:32:28Because oh that's not fair
00:32:29Oh no
00:32:30But so we want to make her now so great again great writing
00:32:33It's such a fun show to be a part of and
00:32:38I think this series is quite different you're right there was a a bit of a darkness to see to season three
00:32:44We lost lisa the character of lisa at the end of it
00:32:47Um very very emotional ending and in some ways this this sort of these news stories start out with all the characters grieving lisa and then
00:32:59What quickly starts to take its place is more of a
00:33:03Love story more of a kind of um rom-com type
00:33:07Flavor and that's that was really really fun to do so if you thought the last series was dark
00:33:12You won't believe how light this series then becomes what i just don't understand is how ben miller fits it all in because you've got all that
00:33:20You've got your children's book writing you're you're working on a novel now
00:33:22Which is is sort of based on richard hannah of 39 steps fame so you're going into grown-up writing now as well
00:33:29Yeah i'm writing for good sleep i do sleep i only write for three hours in the morning
00:33:36But i really write for those three hours and then i take the rest of the day off
00:33:39And i started taking evenings off and weekends off and i found
00:33:45That it's not the working it's the recharging if you can recharge more
00:33:49Then you're just more productive in those three hours or whatever that you spend the morning so i'm less busy than i've ever been
00:33:55I really must stop mrs titchmarsh from watching this program
00:33:59How does it work with you i don't know how do you write when do you write where do you write oh in the morning
00:34:04Oh in the morning nine through till one nine to one yeah i say it was same yeah but then i'm done
00:34:10Yes following morning but it getting the both this is turning into a counselling session you can switch off now if you want to go we're just talking about what we do
00:34:19My down time is when i'm pottering i mean i think people think you know could assume i just garden for
00:34:24Telly i don't i garden for therapy i adore it i like improving the landscape
00:34:29And when i'm out there on my own just messing around i know then
00:34:34That i want to say i'm at my i am never happier than when i'm out there just being at one with nature and it that's my therapy
00:34:42Really that's a superpower the gardening i never thought about that that is like a kind of active meditation
00:34:47Yeah yeah yeah totally that's wonderful well enough about me what
00:34:52Always a delight thank you ben good luck with the book now we look forward to professor t coming
00:34:56Thank you i just must try and distract my wife when you're talking about taking more time off
00:35:02Now i'm talking a witch in this fast-paced world where the emphasis is on immediacy i mean a photograph
00:35:08Makes time stand still perhaps i should do that
00:35:11Give us all a moment to think to react and to feel which means it's time for walk on the wild side
00:35:19Your dose of nature sorted walk on the wild side on love your weekend sponsored by wwf
00:35:38Including Feel From Ghике
00:35:40Huh
00:35:41So
00:35:42Ooh
00:35:53Well
00:35:54You
00:35:55My
00:35:55You
00:35:57I
00:35:58You
00:36:00I
00:36:01You
00:36:02You
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00:45:09và khá là những nơi đồn hữu lắm và những nỗ lượng đều thông qua mà
00:45:14nên khi có một phụm nó n grill nhất đó luyện và phụm nó sẽ làm,
00:45:18để phụ tí lạc đặc vẻ nhìn những phụm màu hoạч đặc vô như những nỗ lượng đó.
00:45:22Bạn có đầy nuôi đủ nào?
00:45:24Nếu bạn muốn nhiều cải quản đori với các nỗ lượng đặc vội thì bạn có thể phải
00:45:271 từ dạng có những nỗ lượng đặc vô như thế nào.
00:45:31Bạn có các phụt phụt yng cụm.
00:45:32Hĩnh đặc biệt là một chút hữu lượng.
00:45:36Not for really very very hard frost though
00:45:38No, and a few years ago we did have that issue where quite a lot of pinthosporums hit hard back
00:45:44so if you do have it on a patio, it's probably the best place for it
00:45:47but stick it somewhere slightly out of the way so it's not going to get too exposed
00:45:51Near a wall which acts like a storage heater
00:45:53Yeah
00:45:54Osmanthus?
00:45:55Osmanthus, which will flower and give you that wonderful scent during the winter months as well
00:45:59so best position close to a door so you really benefit from it as you go past
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00:48:48Nhưng mà...
00:48:50I did demur her at first
00:48:52but in the end I was quite
00:48:54overborn.
00:48:55I've never known him so insistent since.
00:48:59Which a bit embarrassing really.
00:49:00No.
00:49:01No, I think it's wonderful. I'm very pleased
00:49:04for you.
00:49:05I did point out that it wasn't a very
00:49:08convenient moment because you'd been here
00:49:10in the shop on your own.
00:49:11Oh, forget it love. You know what they say.
00:49:13Never look a gift horse in the mouth.
00:49:15Oh, you did right.
00:49:16And Derek did right for the sound of it.
00:49:18You've been shoving parsnips down him all weekend.
00:49:20No, I don't put any credence
00:49:22on that parsnip business, Rita.
00:49:24I dare say they're nourishingly not.
00:49:26So they struck off the menu now then, are they?
00:49:28Well, as it happened with
00:49:30having them in the house.
00:49:32Saturday night I mashed some up
00:49:34with some carrots. It was a very nice mixture
00:49:36actually. Yes.
00:49:38And then Sunday with the joint
00:49:40well, there was still a few left
00:49:42over so I roasted
00:49:44and you're trying to tell me
00:49:46they had no effect.
00:49:47Now, come on, admit it.
00:49:48I bet parsnips are going to be
00:49:49a permanent part of your shopping list
00:49:51from now on, eh?
00:49:52Rita, I think we should talk
00:49:54about something else.
00:49:55Something more uplifting.
00:49:59Did you instinctively know
00:50:00how to work together, you two?
00:50:02You and Rita, you and Barbara Knox.
00:50:03I mean, it was a double act
00:50:04every bit as well known as
00:50:05Morecambe and Wise by the end, I think, really.
00:50:07I think there are actors
00:50:09well, like people
00:50:10where you meet
00:50:11you just have an affinity with
00:50:13don't you?
00:50:14And that happened with us
00:50:15yeah, we got on very well.
00:50:17Because you were both
00:50:17accomplished stage actors
00:50:19before you went into
00:50:20Coronation Street.
00:50:20Yes.
00:50:20People forget that
00:50:21you did rep,
00:50:22you both did rep,
00:50:24you know, weekly rep
00:50:25doing a different play.
00:50:26So you were well versed
00:50:28in the acting profession
00:50:29before you hit the cobbles.
00:50:30Yeah, I mean,
00:50:31and it's forgotten about largely
00:50:34that there were wonderful reps
00:50:36all over the country
00:50:37and that's why you learned
00:50:39your job and you have,
00:50:41again, you get to know
00:50:44the teamwork is so good.
00:50:45Yeah.
00:50:46And I think, you know,
00:50:46we just came from that background
00:50:48and we got all over.
00:50:491,700 episodes.
00:50:52That's a heck of a lot of episodes.
00:50:54Did you expect when you joined
00:50:57that it would be a long run?
00:50:58Were you ready for a long run?
00:50:59No, no,
00:51:01because by then I had two children.
00:51:02I was living in Scotland
00:51:03and I was put the career
00:51:04on hold for really
00:51:06and this came along
00:51:07and it was one episode only
00:51:10and it was Emily Bishop's
00:51:12engagement party
00:51:13and I think it was
00:51:16terrified, terrified.
00:51:18You go into a group of people
00:51:19who've worked together
00:51:20a long time.
00:51:21Oh my goodness,
00:51:22it was frightening.
00:51:23And then they were all very nice
00:51:26but they were a team,
00:51:27you know,
00:51:27you're an outsider coming in.
00:51:29You're an interlope.
00:51:29but let's have a look
00:51:31at your first appearance
00:51:32with an indomitable woman
00:51:34and the Coronation Street cast.
00:51:37Excuse me?
00:51:38What can I do you for?
00:51:39I'm a friend.
00:51:41Who are?
00:51:41Royalty?
00:51:42I remember the stoop
00:51:42that keeps the bag shop
00:51:43at the back of Market Street.
00:51:44Oh, Miss Nugent's actually.
00:51:46I work across
00:51:47at the warehouse with her.
00:51:49She's my supervisor.
00:51:50Oh yes,
00:51:51and what does that
00:51:51entitle you to?
00:51:52I wouldn't mind a drink.
00:51:54Well,
00:51:54state your pleasure.
00:51:55I'll have a small orange juice
00:51:57with just a dash of soda
00:51:59and loads of ice.
00:52:00And you'll get pleasure
00:52:01out of supping a concoction
00:52:02like that,
00:52:02will you?
00:52:03Oh,
00:52:03I'll never touch alcohol.
00:52:05You know,
00:52:05I had an aunt who was a teetotaler
00:52:07and when she died
00:52:08they found a layer of fluff
00:52:09all the way up inside her.
00:52:10Directly killed her.
00:52:12How quaint.
00:52:13I can't tempt you then.
00:52:14Oh no,
00:52:15thank you.
00:52:16A clear head ensures
00:52:17a clear conscience.
00:52:18Go on,
00:52:19it's a party.
00:52:21All right then,
00:52:23I'll try just a very small gin.
00:52:25That's more like it.
00:52:28Acting opposite
00:52:29the great Violet Carstens,
00:52:31Ena Sharples.
00:52:32I suspect those nerves
00:52:34you had there
00:52:34were real
00:52:35because she was this great
00:52:36harridan of a woman,
00:52:38wasn't she?
00:52:38She played her.
00:52:38She played,
00:52:39yes.
00:52:40She wasn't at all.
00:52:41But she did have
00:52:43a lot of power somehow
00:52:44just as a person.
00:52:46And I know once
00:52:47we were in the green room
00:52:48and somehow
00:52:49we were singing
00:52:50and got into hymns
00:52:51and she said,
00:52:53well at least it shows
00:52:54your girls were well brought up.
00:52:57She did have stature.
00:52:59Yeah,
00:52:59well the hairnet
00:53:00did a lot of the acting
00:53:01didn't it in that?
00:53:02You know,
00:53:02when you put that thing on
00:53:03I think she was quite relieved
00:53:04she didn't have to spend
00:53:05too long in make-up
00:53:06with that on.
00:53:07The wonderful thing was
00:53:09we had the Thursday mornings
00:53:10off at those days
00:53:11and she would go
00:53:14to the hairdressers
00:53:15and she had beautiful hair
00:53:16and it was,
00:53:17she had it
00:53:18slightly purpley
00:53:20but very slightly.
00:53:22And then she put the hairnet on
00:53:24and became
00:53:24in a shop
00:53:25underneath.
00:53:27There were these stalwarts
00:53:28weren't they
00:53:29in those days
00:53:29Elsie Turner,
00:53:30Pat Phoenix,
00:53:31Violet,
00:53:32Mini Caldwell,
00:53:34that triumvirate
00:53:35in The Rovers Returns
00:53:38sitting at the table
00:53:38with their milk stout.
00:53:40That's right.
00:53:40The writing,
00:53:42particularly during that period,
00:53:43was really superb.
00:53:44and that was wonderful.
00:53:46Yeah.
00:53:46Wasn't it, Pat?
00:53:47What was your working week like that?
00:53:49Because now,
00:53:50far more episodes now.
00:53:51Oh!
00:53:51No time to rehearse really,
00:53:53it's get down there,
00:53:54do it,
00:53:54film it off
00:53:55and on again.
00:53:56Yes,
00:53:56and very much out of sequence
00:53:58as well,
00:53:58which must be difficult.
00:54:00We did a bit of that
00:54:01but now
00:54:01it's all the time.
00:54:02We just rehearsed it.
00:54:05I think we had
00:54:06two a week
00:54:08or three a week.
00:54:09Two a week,
00:54:09I think,
00:54:10when I first went in.
00:54:11And then Thursday morning
00:54:13was off.
00:54:15Thursday afternoon
00:54:16we were
00:54:17dress rehearsal
00:54:18and then we recorded
00:54:20on Fridays.
00:54:21So you'd time
00:54:23to hone it
00:54:24and sharpen it up.
00:54:24Yes, absolutely.
00:54:26It always had the ability,
00:54:28particularly in those days,
00:54:30thinking of people
00:54:31like Hilda Ogden,
00:54:31like Jean Alexander,
00:54:32the ability
00:54:33to marry
00:54:34almost side by side
00:54:35tragedy and comedy.
00:54:37You'd go from
00:54:38an uproariously funny scene
00:54:39to something
00:54:40terribly moving
00:54:41and they would switch
00:54:43your own emotions
00:54:44as you were watching.
00:54:46Oh, that's clever.
00:54:47But that became
00:54:48part of your life,
00:54:49didn't it?
00:54:50That's what life is.
00:54:51And that's what
00:54:52brought people
00:54:53very close to it,
00:54:54I think,
00:54:54because it really was
00:54:55like proper life
00:54:57and just that chit-chat,
00:54:59as I said,
00:54:59it doesn't mean anything
00:55:01but it's just
00:55:01and it's just a funniness
00:55:02between people.
00:55:04It was lovely.
00:55:04But then came
00:55:05the romantic involvements.
00:55:07Oh.
00:55:08And I'm going to mention
00:55:09two names here.
00:55:10I'm going to mention
00:55:10Derek
00:55:11and I'm going to mention
00:55:12Victor Pendlebury.
00:55:13Oh, that was a difficult
00:55:14time for Mavis.
00:55:16Let's have a look at that
00:55:20difficult time
00:55:20and let me see
00:55:21the love triangle.
00:55:23Can you feel yourself
00:55:24relaxing, Mavis?
00:55:26Tension oozing out of you.
00:55:28Tranquility creeping in.
00:55:33Oh.
00:55:33Yes, I can.
00:55:37Oh.
00:55:39I didn't realise
00:55:41feet were so
00:55:42sensitive.
00:55:54Put my wife's foot
00:55:56down immediately.
00:55:56Derek.
00:55:57Hello, Derek.
00:55:58How could you, Mavis?
00:56:01How could you?
00:56:05Oh.
00:56:06Caught red-handed by Derek.
00:56:08Peter Baldwin.
00:56:09That was a great,
00:56:10well, double act,
00:56:12I call it.
00:56:12There was a great rapport
00:56:14between you and Rita.
00:56:15with you and Peter.
00:56:16Well, we'd worked together
00:56:17in the theatre
00:56:18and that was lovely.
00:56:20So you knew one another
00:56:22well before he came on?
00:56:23When he was coming in,
00:56:24I knew I'd got a new man.
00:56:26Mavis had a lot of men
00:56:27in her life.
00:56:28And the director said,
00:56:32come and meet your new man.
00:56:34He's someone you used
00:56:36to live with.
00:56:38Well, that takes the mind
00:56:40back to the meeting.
00:56:42And it was, in fact,
00:56:42it was Peter
00:56:43and we'd all shared
00:56:44our house together
00:56:45in Exmouth,
00:56:46my first job.
00:56:47You did quite a bit
00:56:48of house, Sherry,
00:56:49because you shared
00:56:49your house with Helen
00:56:50Worth, didn't you,
00:56:51with Gail for a long while.
00:56:52Yes, yes.
00:56:53When you were working together.
00:56:54Yes, and I still see her.
00:56:55Because she's left the programme.
00:56:57It was a huge part
00:57:00of your life, wasn't it,
00:57:01for a long period
00:57:01in your life.
00:57:03Yes.
00:57:03Yes, it was.
00:57:05But, you know,
00:57:05I still think the balance
00:57:07was lovely
00:57:07because I had 15 years
00:57:08of theatre.
00:57:09Yeah.
00:57:09And then about 20,
00:57:11I don't know how many,
00:57:1222 or something
00:57:13in Coronation Street.
00:57:14and then I left
00:57:16because I thought,
00:57:17well, I'm either going
00:57:18to live and die here,
00:57:19which was very happy.
00:57:20I loved being with
00:57:21all those people.
00:57:23But, or I, you know,
00:57:25oh, I'll leave
00:57:27and see if I can do
00:57:28any more theatre
00:57:29and telly
00:57:30or any different things.
00:57:32and it worked out well.
00:57:33It did work out well
00:57:34with one thing in particular
00:57:35which had us all,
00:57:37and we still watch repeats,
00:57:38Mrs T and I at home.
00:57:39I mean, we are addicted at home
00:57:41to Victoria Wood's glorious
00:57:43dinner ladies.
00:57:45Oh, well, I hope
00:57:46you're going to perk up
00:57:48before we hit the shops.
00:57:49I've got two novelty
00:57:50hot water bottles
00:57:51and some left-handed secateurs
00:57:53to track down by five.
00:57:55Right, you don't have
00:57:55your Christmas shopping, dolly.
00:57:56I had till two silly fools
00:57:59in me bums and tums
00:58:00turn up bearing gifts.
00:58:02That's thrown me right out.
00:58:04Plus, Bob's sister,
00:58:06who usually keeps my present
00:58:07pretty much at bath cube level,
00:58:09has upgraded me
00:58:10to a cafetier.
00:58:12Have you owned it already?
00:58:14Well, how else do I know
00:58:15what price range
00:58:16I'm batting back with?
00:58:18I've done her
00:58:19a germicidal hand cream,
00:58:21but actually,
00:58:21that's not wasted.
00:58:22I can divert that
00:58:23to the paper boy.
00:58:25I mean,
00:58:26they are priceless.
00:58:27Victoria Woods,
00:58:28they're so intricate,
00:58:29those scenes of dialogue.
00:58:31Yes, but again,
00:58:32it's dialogue, isn't it?
00:58:33I mean,
00:58:34it starts with the writer
00:58:36and then the interpreters.
00:58:38And a sparkling cast
00:58:40and a lot of work
00:58:40with Anne Reid,
00:58:41who's a stalwart
00:58:42like you on this programme.
00:58:43I'm wearing an necklace
00:58:44she gave me today.
00:58:46Bless her heart.
00:58:48And when you're faced
00:58:49with someone like that,
00:58:51to bat off,
00:58:51it's like a game
00:58:52of ping pong,
00:58:53isn't it?
00:58:53It's so joyous to do.
00:58:55because you know
00:58:57you're creating something
00:58:58that's going to give
00:59:00such pleasure,
00:59:01you know,
00:59:01and fun.
00:59:02But whenever I talk
00:59:03to anybody who's
00:59:03Indian ladies,
00:59:05they all,
00:59:06there's a kind of,
00:59:07yes,
00:59:08Vic was very strict.
00:59:09Oh, there was.
00:59:10It was terrifying.
00:59:12And in front of a live audience,
00:59:13too,
00:59:14so it was...
00:59:14Yeah,
00:59:15oh, yes.
00:59:15As was.
00:59:16And she used to do a warm-up
00:59:17to begin with
00:59:18and she'd be there
00:59:19sort of doing her stuff,
00:59:20everybody killing themselves
00:59:22and laughing
00:59:22and then she'd say,
00:59:23right,
00:59:23well,
00:59:24and suddenly she'd,
00:59:25oh,
00:59:26she'd done that.
00:59:27Talent, yeah.
00:59:28During which time
00:59:29your nerves
00:59:29and...
00:59:30You were for many years
00:59:34up in Yorkshire,
00:59:35up in Clapham.
00:59:35You were a great gardener,
00:59:36you wrote a couple
00:59:37of gardening books,
00:59:38so you're part of the...
00:59:38And you came to my garden.
00:59:40I know,
00:59:40and it was sweet.
00:59:41You were a young man.
00:59:42I was.
00:59:43I was young and thrusting then.
00:59:45Well,
00:59:46I was young.
00:59:46And, you know,
00:59:48it's been lovely
00:59:49seeing you over the years
00:59:50and catching up
00:59:51every now and again
00:59:51and that little coterie
00:59:52of people who lived
00:59:53up near Clapham,
00:59:54you know,
00:59:54Alan Bennett
00:59:54and Madge Hindle
00:59:55and Russell Hardy
00:59:56all in that little bit of Yorkshire.
00:59:57All of them.
00:59:58And now you're at
00:59:58Favisham in Kent.
00:59:59I am.
01:00:00I moved there
01:00:01because one of my sons
01:00:02lives there
01:00:03and it was,
01:00:03you know,
01:00:04handier to have me
01:00:05on site.
01:00:07And, you know,
01:00:08I've lived...
01:00:09Do you know,
01:00:10I've moved 22 times
01:00:11in my life?
01:00:12No.
01:00:13I have.
01:00:1522?
01:00:1522.
01:00:16But that's mostly
01:00:17because we work.
01:00:18Gosh,
01:00:18I'm just about to manage
01:00:19the fourth
01:00:20in 50 years.
01:00:22It's enough,
01:00:22enough, enough.
01:00:24Yeah.
01:00:24Am I allowed to tell you,
01:00:25you know,
01:00:26when Thelma came on last time
01:00:27she was 95,
01:00:28she's now 96.
01:00:29I mean,
01:00:29it's outrageous.
01:00:30In the words
01:00:31of that famous film,
01:00:32I'll have what she's having.
01:00:34Lovely to have you with us.
01:00:35Thank you.
01:00:36Always a treat.
01:00:42Now,
01:00:42you can forget
01:00:43the Channel Tunnel
01:00:44and the Olympic Stadium.
01:00:47As epic building projects go,
01:00:48the renovation
01:00:49of our chicken run
01:00:51must surely rank
01:00:52as one of the greats.
01:00:54Thanks to the endeavour
01:00:55of one man and his son,
01:00:56our once dilapidated hen house
01:00:58has been transformed
01:00:59into five-star accommodation
01:01:01which we can be proud of.
01:01:04Let's have a look at it before.
01:01:05It was completely falling down.
01:01:07It didn't do much at all
01:01:10to protect them
01:01:10from vermin,
01:01:12from foxes,
01:01:12from the incursions
01:01:13of all sorts of nasty things
01:01:15that we didn't want in there.
01:01:17It just wasn't safe
01:01:18and it certainly wasn't safe
01:01:19for human beings
01:01:20to go in either
01:01:20because bits kept falling
01:01:22on their heads.
01:01:23Anyway,
01:01:24it's all been sorted now.
01:01:25It is a veritable palace.
01:01:27I'm near to reveal
01:01:28his finished masterpiece.
01:01:29Welcome back.
01:01:30Carpenter,
01:01:31Rob Bent.
01:01:31I'm surprised you came back,
01:01:33Rob, frankly.
01:01:34Oh, well, do you know what?
01:01:36This was a mammoth task.
01:01:38A mammoth task?
01:01:39I thought you might
01:01:39never want to see it again.
01:01:41It took me so long.
01:01:42It would go on and on
01:01:43and on and on
01:01:43because it was a good job.
01:01:44Shall we have a look
01:01:45at what you did?
01:01:46Come in.
01:01:46Yeah, let's go in
01:01:46and take a look.
01:01:47Don't let them out.
01:01:48Don't go in.
01:01:49No, no, no.
01:01:50Go on, in you go.
01:01:51That's it.
01:01:51Well done.
01:01:53It is now hugely sturdy
01:01:54with, you know,
01:01:57timber which is going to
01:01:57last for years now.
01:01:58Yeah, all treated timber
01:01:59so it can really take
01:02:00the weather for years
01:02:01to come.
01:02:02And you've used
01:02:03not chicken wire
01:02:04but this crisscross square wire
01:02:07which is, what,
01:02:08much stronger?
01:02:09Yeah, yeah.
01:02:09So it's a lot more durable
01:02:11and because it's got
01:02:12a lot less stretch on it
01:02:13it's harder for the foxes
01:02:14then to then get inside.
01:02:16We've made sure
01:02:16the mesh itself
01:02:17is actually buried
01:02:18under the ground
01:02:18so if they try to dig
01:02:19they're going to meet
01:02:20more mesh again
01:02:21and if they try to get
01:02:22up and over
01:02:22there's no way of getting in.
01:02:24Well, they seem happy
01:02:25don't they,
01:02:25clucking around.
01:02:26Let's go out
01:02:27and admire the structure
01:02:28on the outside.
01:02:29Now a building
01:02:31of such grandeur
01:02:32deserves its own sign
01:02:35to set it off
01:02:36but no ordinary sign
01:02:38would do
01:02:38only the best
01:02:39for our manor farm chicken.
01:02:41So we called in
01:02:42the services
01:02:43of a sign writer
01:02:44friend of the show
01:02:45Kerry Williams
01:02:46and she joins us now.
01:02:47Welcome Kerry.
01:02:47Are you ready for this?
01:02:48Yeah, I'm ready for this.
01:02:49I feel like there should be
01:02:49a drum roll.
01:02:50All right.
01:02:51Ready?
01:02:53There we go.
01:02:54Oh, look at that.
01:02:55This coop wasn't built in a day.
01:02:57It wasn't.
01:02:58It was a bit like Rome.
01:02:59Rome was built quicker than this.
01:03:00I hope Rob doesn't mind
01:03:01but yeah,
01:03:01it wasn't built in a day.
01:03:02Oh, beautiful.
01:03:03How long did it take you
01:03:04to do that?
01:03:05Not too long
01:03:06to be honest.
01:03:07It was quite a quick one.
01:03:08What took the longest
01:03:08was the little wheat sheaves
01:03:09to make sure
01:03:11that they look nice and bright
01:03:12against the blue.
01:03:12You are so clever.
01:03:14Isn't that lovely?
01:03:14Our very own sign.
01:03:16What a shame
01:03:16we haven't got anybody
01:03:17who can put it up.
01:03:18We need a handyman really,
01:03:19don't we?
01:03:19We need a handyman.
01:03:20Cue handyman.
01:03:21Oh, Rob, you're still here.
01:03:23I thought you'd have run away.
01:03:25Oh, no, no, no.
01:03:26I'm back.
01:03:26I'm back.
01:03:27We've got another little job
01:03:28for you, please.
01:03:29All right.
01:03:30Let's have a little.
01:03:31There you go.
01:03:32Size it up there.
01:03:34You see,
01:03:35isn't it good
01:03:35that we've got an expert?
01:03:37No pair of tools,
01:03:38nothing.
01:03:38Just screwing a couple.
01:03:39Straight in.
01:03:40Yeah.
01:03:42And here it goes.
01:03:43With silver.
01:03:44Pshh.
01:03:45Pshh.
01:03:47Hey.
01:03:47I don't have it.
01:03:48Look at that.
01:03:50So, we have a new sign.
01:03:52We have a new run.
01:03:54All we need to do now
01:03:55is officially open it.
01:03:57Love your weekend style.
01:03:58So, without further ado,
01:04:00ladies and gentlemen,
01:04:01I give you
01:04:02Thelma Barlow,
01:04:03who is going to give us
01:04:05a little twirl
01:04:06to show us this hat
01:04:07she's made
01:04:08before she's...
01:04:09I mean, look.
01:04:11If they'd sold those
01:04:12in the cabin,
01:04:13you could have made a mint.
01:04:15Off you go, Thelma.
01:04:16Well.
01:04:17Over to you.
01:04:18Thank you, Alan.
01:04:19And friends,
01:04:21it really is
01:04:22a true honour
01:04:23to be here today
01:04:24with you all.
01:04:25And as an animal lover myself,
01:04:28I'm just filled with joy
01:04:31to see this beautiful piece
01:04:34of architecture.
01:04:36Oh, it's a building,
01:04:38I hope,
01:04:39in which the chickens
01:04:40now and in the future
01:04:42will feel safe
01:04:44and have many, many
01:04:45happy hours,
01:04:46happy lives.
01:04:47So,
01:04:48I hereby
01:04:50declare
01:04:51this chicken inn
01:04:53open.
01:04:56Yay!
01:04:58The Queen
01:05:02could not have done it better.
01:05:04Oh, I know that.
01:05:04Thank you, Thelma.
01:05:06Now, you'll recall
01:05:07we introduced
01:05:07two new chickens
01:05:08and asked you at home
01:05:09to name them
01:05:11via our Facebook poll.
01:05:13So,
01:05:13if Rob and Kerry
01:05:14would like to bring them in,
01:05:16I will reveal the results.
01:05:19Here we are.
01:05:20Now,
01:05:20thanks to everyone
01:05:21who voted in the poll,
01:05:22I'm delighted to reveal
01:05:23the names chosen
01:05:24by you at home.
01:05:25We asked you for
01:05:26Jane Austen-related names.
01:05:29So,
01:05:29I give you,
01:05:30ladies and gentlemen,
01:05:32Fanny Price
01:05:33and her ear,
01:05:36Lady Catherine de Bourgh.
01:05:38Welcome
01:05:38to your new home.
01:05:41Shall we let them free?
01:05:42Let them have a little run outside.
01:05:43Down you go, then.
01:05:44Go on.
01:05:45See,
01:05:45just don't fly off.
01:05:47Okay?
01:05:48There you go.
01:05:48Sweet.
01:05:49Wonderful.
01:05:50And right behind you,
01:05:51you've got a palace.
01:05:52Oh,
01:05:52look at that.
01:05:53At home already.
01:05:54I'm sure they'll fit in perfectly.
01:05:56Thanks once again
01:05:57to Rob,
01:05:58to Kerry
01:05:59and to Thelma.
01:06:00An event
01:06:01that will go down
01:06:01in Love Your Weekend history.
01:06:03Oh,
01:06:04yeah,
01:06:05now behave.
01:06:05Yes.
01:06:05Oh,
01:06:06don't.
01:06:07Definitely good on you.
01:06:09Now,
01:06:09she'd have loved to be here
01:06:10for the grand opening.
01:06:12You know,
01:06:12she likes a shindig,
01:06:13but sadly,
01:06:14she's been busy
01:06:15leading us down
01:06:15the garden path once more.
01:06:17Today,
01:06:17she's unveiling the secrets
01:06:18of nature's majestic beauty,
01:06:21the horse chestnut.
01:06:22Take it away,
01:06:23Leslie,
01:06:23while I go and find a chick inn.
01:06:24Ha!
01:06:27Oh,
01:06:28Alan,
01:06:29the chick inn.
01:06:30That's an excellent
01:06:31coop name
01:06:32if I ever heard one.
01:06:33Now,
01:06:34if you're anything like me,
01:06:36you cannot stroll
01:06:37through a garden in autumn
01:06:38without pausing
01:06:39to admire today's beauty.
01:06:41Yes.
01:06:42Today,
01:06:43I'm applauding
01:06:44the magnificent
01:06:45horse chestnut tree.
01:06:46Oh,
01:06:47what a delight they are.
01:06:48The clatter of conkers,
01:06:50the earthy smell
01:06:51of fallen leaves.
01:06:52It takes me straight back
01:06:53to those playground days
01:06:54It feels like
01:06:56only yesterday,
01:06:57doesn't it?
01:06:57Hunting through
01:06:58the fallen bounty
01:06:59for that perfect,
01:07:00glossy conquer
01:07:01of champions.
01:07:02Honestly,
01:07:02autumn just wouldn't be autumn
01:07:04without a little mischief,
01:07:05a little nostalgia
01:07:06and shopping bags
01:07:07full to burst
01:07:08with prize conkers.
01:07:12Horse chestnut trees
01:07:13are impressive
01:07:14in every way.
01:07:15They can grow
01:07:16to 40 metres tall
01:07:18and live for up
01:07:19to 300 years.
01:07:21Just a quick reminder,
01:07:22horse chestnuts
01:07:23are not
01:07:24sweet chestnuts.
01:07:25Those roasting
01:07:26on your open fire
01:07:27come from a different
01:07:28tree entirely
01:07:29and they're not
01:07:30even related.
01:07:32So don't go thinking
01:07:33a conker could replace
01:07:34your Christmas treat.
01:07:36The bark of a horse
01:07:37chestnut tree
01:07:38is rough,
01:07:39scaly
01:07:39and full of character.
01:07:41These trees
01:07:42are true storytellers.
01:07:44Imagine all the
01:07:46generations of children
01:07:47who've played beneath them.
01:07:49So,
01:07:49dearest viewers,
01:07:50as you wander
01:07:51down your garden
01:07:52path this autumn,
01:07:54wellies crunching
01:07:54on amber leaves,
01:07:56pause under
01:07:57a horse chestnut tree
01:07:58and let the nostalgia
01:08:00wash over you.
01:08:02So,
01:08:02that's your game,
01:08:03Alan.
01:08:04Meet you by the
01:08:05water fountain
01:08:06at lunchtime
01:08:07if you're brave enough.
01:08:08Ah,
01:08:11thank you,
01:08:11Leslie.
01:08:12Horse chestnuts
01:08:13with their mahogany
01:08:13bright conkers,
01:08:15the very essence
01:08:16of autumn.
01:08:16Did you ever play
01:08:16conkers?
01:08:17Yes.
01:08:18You did?
01:08:18Oh,
01:08:18yes.
01:08:19I bet you had
01:08:19a 49er.
01:08:20I don't know
01:08:21about a 49er.
01:08:22I'll tell you later.
01:08:23Coming up
01:08:24at the fun
01:08:25begin
01:08:25with the rum.
01:08:27Ian Burrell's
01:08:27on a mission
01:08:28to spice up
01:08:29your Sunday morning
01:08:29even more
01:08:30with his delicious
01:08:31guide to
01:08:32flavoursome
01:08:32autumnal
01:08:33rum cocktails.
01:08:35And from
01:08:35an Argentinian
01:08:36born Cuban
01:08:37revolutionary
01:08:38in Edita
01:08:38to playing
01:08:40the lead
01:08:40in the critically
01:08:41acclaimed
01:08:41Godspell
01:08:42to a chart
01:08:43topping pop
01:08:43career.
01:08:44Proving that
01:08:45the only way
01:08:45really is Essex,
01:08:47David Essex
01:08:48joins me for some
01:08:48nostalgic chat
01:08:50and much more
01:08:50right after this.
01:09:06Welcome back
01:09:07to Love Your Weekend.
01:09:08Still ahead,
01:09:09warm,
01:09:10aromatic
01:09:10and sweet.
01:09:12Things are set
01:09:13to get giddy
01:09:13on today's
01:09:14Best of British.
01:09:15Rum ambassador
01:09:16Ian Burrell's
01:09:17having fun
01:09:17with spiced
01:09:18rum cocktails
01:09:19inspired by
01:09:20tropical climes.
01:09:22Do a bit of that.
01:09:23But first,
01:09:24from topping
01:09:25charts
01:09:26and breaking
01:09:27hearts
01:09:27to performing
01:09:28standout roles
01:09:29on stage
01:09:30and screen,
01:09:31few stars
01:09:32have maintained
01:09:33as long
01:09:34or as enduring
01:09:35a career
01:09:36as my next guest.
01:09:37Set to embark
01:09:38on a nationwide
01:09:38tour next year,
01:09:40he'll once again
01:09:41be packing out
01:09:41venues across
01:09:42the country,
01:09:43giving his loyal
01:09:44fans exactly
01:09:45what they want.
01:09:46A set list
01:09:47packed with hits
01:09:49like these.
01:09:50We're going to make
01:09:53you a star
01:09:55We're going to make
01:10:00you a star
01:10:02Hold me close
01:10:07Don't let me go
01:10:08Oh no
01:10:10I
01:10:12Yes I love you
01:10:14And I think
01:10:15that you know
01:10:16Do you know
01:10:18It's a love
01:10:19that could never be
01:10:22We're meant to lock
01:10:24to you and me
01:10:26On a worldwide scale
01:10:30We're just another
01:10:32Winter's tale
01:10:34Each and every one
01:10:36a classic
01:10:37so distinctive
01:10:38with your trademark
01:10:39style there
01:10:40and representing
01:10:42the era
01:10:42I don't know
01:10:42about your life
01:10:43flashing before you
01:10:44I think most of our lives
01:10:46flash before us
01:10:47looking at those
01:10:47What is it about
01:10:49those songs David
01:10:49that have stood
01:10:50the test of time?
01:10:51I don't know really
01:10:52I mean
01:10:52a certain amount
01:10:54of luck
01:10:55I suppose
01:10:55they're catchy
01:10:58aren't they
01:10:59They are
01:10:59There are tunes
01:11:00As a writer
01:11:02I mean all I do
01:11:03is I just sit down
01:11:04and play the keyboard
01:11:04usually write on the keyboards
01:11:06and the chords
01:11:08sort of suggest
01:11:08little figures
01:11:10of melody
01:11:10and I develop them
01:11:12and sing them
01:11:13and here they are
01:11:14Here they are
01:11:15They're still living
01:11:16You're doing this
01:11:16Thanks for the Memories tour
01:11:18Yes
01:11:19With a band
01:11:19It seems to me
01:11:20old mates
01:11:21having fun together
01:11:22so tell us about
01:11:23the troupe
01:11:23that you're travelling with
01:11:24Yeah
01:11:25They're fantastic musicians
01:11:26and generally
01:11:28they don't tour
01:11:29they're all producers
01:11:30and writers
01:11:31in their own right
01:11:32but when I call them all up
01:11:34and say
01:11:34I want to go on tour
01:11:35they say
01:11:35yeah we're there
01:11:36So it's
01:11:38Thanks for the Memories tour
01:11:40Lots of memories
01:11:41but we start in Glasgow
01:11:43in September
01:11:44beginning of September
01:11:45and finish at the Palladium
01:11:47at the end of September
01:11:48so it's 21 dates
01:11:49and I'm looking forward to it
01:11:51and you know
01:11:52the thing about
01:11:53using those musicians
01:11:54is that you're already
01:11:56on page two
01:11:57Yes
01:11:57You know what I mean
01:11:58you just sort of
01:11:59we can feel
01:12:01what everybody
01:12:01in the band feels
01:12:03and it's just
01:12:04it's fantastic relationship
01:12:06They were heady times
01:12:09particularly back in
01:12:10in the 70s there
01:12:11with Godspell
01:12:12you know
01:12:13with all those things
01:12:14that you do
01:12:15War of the Worlds
01:12:15and working with
01:12:16Richard Burton
01:12:17yeah that was extraordinary
01:12:20and I went over to
01:12:22Los Angeles
01:12:23to record with him
01:12:24and I think
01:12:26Geoff Wayne
01:12:26had meticulously
01:12:27edited the pieces
01:12:29for him to do
01:12:30the narration of
01:12:31and he said
01:12:31so Richard said
01:12:34oh no
01:12:35I don't want to hear
01:12:35any music
01:12:36I just want to see it
01:12:38so
01:12:39then they had to
01:12:42Geoff had to cut it
01:12:43all in amongst it
01:12:44but it was great
01:12:45to work with him
01:12:45and when I played
01:12:47Byron the poet
01:12:48he came to the
01:12:49Young Vic
01:12:50and led a standing ovation
01:12:52and he came backstage
01:12:53and he said
01:12:53I didn't know
01:12:54you could talk posh
01:12:55so he was there
01:12:57yeah it was quite
01:12:58you know
01:12:59when he really enjoyed
01:13:00the platinum disc
01:13:01from War of the Worlds
01:13:02that meant
01:13:03more than anything
01:13:04that went up
01:13:05posh on the wall
01:13:06and working with people
01:13:08you know
01:13:09huge names then
01:13:10to you
01:13:11when you were
01:13:12on the rise
01:13:13I mean
01:13:13were there times
01:13:15when you were
01:13:15intimidated
01:13:16by the people
01:13:17you were working with
01:13:17or did the
01:13:18journalists turn out
01:13:19the only time
01:13:20I was really
01:13:20intimidated
01:13:21was when I was
01:13:22somewhere in America
01:13:24and I went to see
01:13:26Little Richard
01:13:26and he heard
01:13:28I was out
01:13:29in front
01:13:30and apparently
01:13:31it was a fan
01:13:31or something
01:13:32so they invited me
01:13:33backstage
01:13:34I was intimidated
01:13:35when he came
01:13:36in the dressing room
01:13:37oh my god
01:13:38he was right
01:13:39he was just too much
01:13:41but I don't know
01:13:41generally
01:13:42you know
01:13:44probably
01:13:44most people
01:13:45are nice people
01:13:47I mean
01:13:47working with Ringo
01:13:48and Adam Faith
01:13:50in the films
01:13:51Stardust
01:13:53and that would be
01:13:53the day
01:13:54it was great fun
01:13:55that would be
01:13:55the day
01:13:56that was almost
01:13:56too much fun
01:13:57you know
01:13:58because we'd
01:13:59we'd be very naughty
01:14:01and we'd get up
01:14:01to lots of tricks
01:14:02and the director
01:14:03would go crazy
01:14:04is this when
01:14:05you were doing it
01:14:06in a holiday camp
01:14:07on the Isle of Wight
01:14:07yeah
01:14:08yeah
01:14:08filming with Ringo Starr
01:14:11in a holiday camp
01:14:12on the Isle of Wight
01:14:13it's a intriguing combination
01:14:14yeah
01:14:15that was fun to do
01:14:17talking of big names
01:14:18you duetted
01:14:19with one extremely big name
01:14:21here is
01:14:22David Essex
01:14:22duetting
01:14:23with Cher
01:14:24many times
01:14:25I've been alone
01:14:27and many times
01:14:29I've cried
01:14:30anyway
01:14:31you'll never know
01:14:33the many times
01:14:35I've tried
01:14:36but still
01:14:37they
01:14:38lead me
01:14:39back
01:14:40to that
01:14:42long
01:14:43winding road
01:14:47you left me
01:14:51standing here
01:14:53long
01:14:56long
01:14:56time
01:14:57ago
01:14:58yeah
01:14:59duetting with Cher
01:15:01there seemed to be a very good rapport going there
01:15:03you were very relaxed in that clip
01:15:04were you really relaxed
01:15:05yeah
01:15:06we were
01:15:06yeah
01:15:07she was great fun
01:15:08and I really enjoyed that
01:15:10I did
01:15:10a few TVs in America
01:15:12but I probably should have spent more time in America
01:15:14but I had the family
01:15:16yeah
01:15:16and lots of things going on in Britain
01:15:19so I stayed here
01:15:20one of the roles you created
01:15:22apart from creating the role in Godspell
01:15:25the lead role
01:15:26was that of Che Guevara in Evita
01:15:29yeah
01:15:29and that astonishing song
01:15:32which became in a way
01:15:34something of a signature tune for you
01:15:35for a good while there
01:15:36we had Elaine Page playing the role of Evita
01:15:38you playing Che Guevara
01:15:39with this astonishing song
01:15:41which still has enormous resonance today
01:15:44she had her moment
01:15:47she had some style
01:15:49the best show in town
01:15:51was the crowd
01:15:52outside the casa
01:15:54Rosa
01:15:55de Reine va Perón
01:15:57but that's all gone now
01:16:01as soon as the smoke
01:16:02the funeral clears
01:16:04we're all gonna see
01:16:06and how
01:16:07she did nothing for years
01:16:12you let down your people
01:16:14Evita
01:16:15you were supposed to have been immortal
01:16:19that's all they wanted
01:16:21not much to ask for
01:16:23but in the end
01:16:24you
01:16:25would not deliver
01:16:26such a meaty song that
01:16:29I mean
01:16:30so much emotion coming
01:16:31that
01:16:32so much criticism within it
01:16:33yeah
01:16:33can you remember the first night
01:16:35do you remember
01:16:36Evita
01:16:37yeah
01:16:37yeah it was extraordinary
01:16:38I mean I was talking about Godspell
01:16:41that was amazing
01:16:43it was like having your own show
01:16:44because whatever you could do
01:16:45if you could juggle
01:16:47you juggled
01:16:48if you could tap dance
01:16:49you tap dance
01:16:50and we directed ourselves
01:16:51to a certain extent
01:16:52and when it opened
01:16:53at the Roundhouse
01:16:54there were queues
01:16:56all around Chalk Farm
01:16:57and that was an extraordinary show
01:17:00and Evita was the same
01:17:02really
01:17:02it was like
01:17:03everybody was waiting
01:17:06for the show to open
01:17:07and it was tricky
01:17:10it was tricky
01:17:12because it became like a landmark
01:17:14in British theatre
01:17:15and working with Hal Prince
01:17:17was very interesting
01:17:19a fantastic Broadway producer
01:17:21director
01:17:22because so I just did
01:17:25what I wanted to do
01:17:26I'd say
01:17:26shall I come on here
01:17:27Hal
01:17:28light a cigar
01:17:28and have a go at Evita
01:17:30and then go off
01:17:31sure David
01:17:32that's fine
01:17:32just go
01:17:33so
01:17:33and then you see it on Broadway
01:17:35with Mandy Patinkin
01:17:36doing exactly the same thing
01:17:38it's like written in stone
01:17:39where you know
01:17:40you just wander on
01:17:41hey
01:17:42but doing Mutiny
01:17:44with Frank Finlay
01:17:45playing Captain Bly
01:17:46and you playing
01:17:47French Christian
01:17:47that's a whole different
01:17:48ball game isn't it
01:17:49when you're actually
01:17:50totally invested in it
01:17:51not just financially
01:17:52but spiritually as well
01:17:53yeah
01:17:53no that was difficult
01:17:55it ran for 18 months
01:17:56at the Piccadilly Theatre
01:17:57and had an incredible set
01:17:59by William Dudley
01:18:00this thing was really
01:18:03I think about the same size
01:18:05of the actual bounty
01:18:06and the hull would rise
01:18:09from the stage
01:18:10and the rigging would come down
01:18:12and the dancers
01:18:13bless them
01:18:14they would swing around
01:18:15on the rigging
01:18:16and the little choir boy
01:18:18would sing
01:18:18as the cabin boy
01:18:20and it was really
01:18:21quite something
01:18:21do you still get a kick
01:18:23out of it David
01:18:23when you're going on
01:18:24this tour now next year
01:18:25with as you say
01:18:26all your mates
01:18:27doing a whole month
01:18:28of thanks for the memories
01:18:30yeah
01:18:30does it all come flooding back
01:18:32and do you love it
01:18:32every bit as much
01:18:33as you did
01:18:33yes I do
01:18:35it surprises me
01:18:36when I go out
01:18:38I'm surprised by
01:18:39the warmth
01:18:40and the kind of interest
01:18:42of the audience
01:18:42you know
01:18:43because I'm in the garden
01:18:45fiddling about
01:18:46and being a dad
01:18:47and all that
01:18:48and then all of a sudden
01:18:48I become David Essex again
01:18:50and it's a bit
01:18:51oh yeah thank you
01:18:53you know
01:18:54so it's reassuring
01:18:56because it's like
01:18:57a celebration
01:18:58of a generation
01:18:59in a way
01:19:00you know
01:19:00that music
01:19:01when you're
01:19:0314 to 18
01:19:05is such a big
01:19:07part of your life
01:19:08yes it is
01:19:09and you look down
01:19:10you see people
01:19:1145 to 60
01:19:12sort of you know
01:19:13really enjoying it
01:19:15it's quite special
01:19:15and a bit more
01:19:16the hair may be shorter
01:19:19but the twinkle's still there
01:19:20pleasure
01:19:21lovely
01:19:22the best of luck
01:19:23with the tour
01:19:23thanks Alan
01:19:24thank you
01:19:25time now
01:19:26to de-stress
01:19:28your Sunday
01:19:28even more
01:19:29as if you weren't
01:19:30de-stressed already
01:19:31with some
01:19:32hypnotic footage
01:19:34of another
01:19:35British landscape
01:19:36set to some
01:19:36beautiful music
01:19:37it's time for today's
01:19:39Ode to Joy
01:19:58to ver
01:20:08to hear
01:20:12what's
01:20:12what's
01:20:12going to be
01:20:13what's
01:20:13good
01:20:13what's
01:20:14what's
01:20:16going to be
01:20:17what's
01:20:17what's
01:20:17going to be
01:20:20Hãy đăng ký kênh để ủng hộ kênh mình nhé.
01:20:50Hãy đăng ký kênh để ủng hộ kênh mình nhé.
01:21:20Hãy đăng ký kênh để ủng hộ kênh mình nhé.
01:21:50Hãy đăng ký kênh để ủng hộ kênh mình nhé.
01:21:52Hãy đăng ký kênh mình nhé.
01:22:24Hãy đăng ký kênh mình nhé.
01:22:26Hãy đăng ký kênh để ủng hộ kênh mình nhé.
01:22:28Hãy đăng ký kênh mình nhé.
01:22:30Hãy đăng ký kênh mình nhé.
01:22:32Hãy đăng ký kênh mình nhé.
01:22:34Hãy đăng ký kênh mình nhé.
01:22:36Hãy đăng ký kênh mình nhé.
01:22:38Hãy đăng ký kênh mình nhé.
01:22:42Hãy đăng ký kênh mình nhé.
01:22:44Hãy đăng ký kênh mình nhé.
01:22:46Hãy đăng ký kênh mình nhé.
01:22:48Một tay kênh mình đã có ít nước ngoài này.
01:22:50Hãy đăng ký kênh mình nhé.
01:22:52Hãy đăng ký kênh mình nhé.
01:22:54S Won'tay Get嘿.
01:22:56Bạn làn nặng thêm tầy, rất là dạc, rất là thọc đặc biệt, dạc đẹp lại trên lần sau đó
01:23:00Đã thật sự tốt lắm, rất là đẹp, rất là đẹp, rất là thịu, rất là đẹp, rất là đẹp, rất là đẹp
01:23:08Nhưng màu ạ, rất là dạc, rất là đẹp, rất là đẹp.
01:23:11Đói là đẹp, rất là đẹp.
01:23:13Cái gì vậy?
01:23:14Như hãy đẹp.
01:23:15Cô không thể lạc, nhưng màu mẹ nó chứ.
01:23:17I've held back on the Bolli's rung, Bolli's spice rung a little bit
01:23:23It has nothing to do with the rum, it's the other stuff with it
01:23:26Oh right, a bit of hazelnut, a bit of lime and citrus inside there
01:23:29Because with a daiquiri, it's quintessentially just the simple ingredients for a truffle cocktail, rum, lime, sugar
01:23:35And a lot of love as well
01:23:36But this one is sort of sugar you use hazelnut
01:23:38The lover liked
01:23:39It is quite light actually, you think it's going to taste like Bailey's from the look of it
01:23:43And it doesn't
01:23:44And it's a citrus coming through inside there
01:23:46Selma, would you marry it, Selma?
01:23:48No
01:23:48No, but it's pleasant enough, but I wouldn't want a lifetime with it
01:23:54Okay, so we're now going to the Isle of Man
01:23:56And we've got what we call a rumble
01:23:59Which is like a bramble
01:24:01And brambles normally is a cocktail made with lemon, a bit of creme de mure and gin
01:24:05But instead of using gin, we're using rum
01:24:07We're using the outliers rum from the Isle of Man
01:24:10So it's again another refreshing drink
01:24:11It's an autumn style of cocktail with spiced rum and a bit of blackberry
01:24:15So quite fruity
01:24:16And you get your vitamin C inside there as well
01:24:17Oh, that's nice
01:24:18And give it a little stir and you can taste the creme de mure
01:24:21Oh, I like that
01:24:22And then you get the lemon and the sugars and the rum coming through
01:24:25Now Selma, I would have thought you would have liked that one
01:24:27I do, it's very refreshing
01:24:29It's kind of brambly
01:24:30And fruity
01:24:31Yeah
01:24:31Exactly
01:24:32Yeah
01:24:32I mean, I was thinking of a bramble because I've read your books many times
01:24:34And I wanted to create a bramble style of cocktail
01:24:37Which is why we call it the rumble
01:24:39Or rumble in the bramble
01:24:40Which is probably a better name for the actual drink
01:24:43But again
01:24:43That sounds very different
01:24:45A rumble in the bramble
01:24:48But it really takes advantage of the spice rum
01:24:51All right, so we're moving on to Revive Rum
01:24:54North Hans we're going to
01:24:56And now this is an old-fashioned
01:24:57Which is a boozy, quite a boozy drink
01:25:00So if you don't drink, have a very light sip of this
01:25:03But use the revival rum
01:25:04We've also added a little bit of apricot
01:25:06Being a nice autumn style of flavour
01:25:08So we've got like an apricot, old-fashioned
01:25:10A little bit of orange
01:25:11And a couple of dashes of bitters inside there
01:25:14So really nice
01:25:15But it is a boozy drink
01:25:16I find myself hanging on David's every word now
01:25:19Yes, I'm a connoisseur
01:25:21I quite like this
01:25:25Wait a minute, wait a minute
01:25:27Quite like
01:25:28That was the strongest one
01:25:29You don't understand I'm now sort of drunk
01:25:32We know he's weak spot now
01:25:37It's just giving more booze
01:25:38He's going to be going for a rumble in the bramble
01:25:41I quite like this one person
01:25:44Do you like this one?
01:25:45Less so
01:25:46Did you like the brambley one better?
01:25:49Yeah
01:25:49Nice
01:25:50I think it's bitters in this you say
01:25:53It's got a bit of bitters inside there
01:25:54Yeah, a bit of apricot, a bit of bitters
01:25:56I like the sound of it
01:25:58Oh right, like apricots
01:25:59I like this one a lot
01:26:01I expect everyone in North Hans to be sipping this
01:26:04Right through the heart of the autumn
01:26:05Living it, yeah
01:26:06Living it
01:26:07Living it
01:26:07Speaking of which, live, live in it
01:26:10Let's move over to live rum
01:26:11All the way from Livingston in Scotland
01:26:13And as it's getting closer to Halloween
01:26:17We've gone with like a Halloween-style drink
01:26:19So this one's got a bit of pumpkin liqueur inside there
01:26:22This is the flip
01:26:22So we've used a bit of egg yolk
01:26:23A bit of pumpkin
01:26:24A bit of nutmeg inside there
01:26:26And a live black spice rum
01:26:27So it's got a bit of cinnamon in there
01:26:29It's got a bit of nutmeg, cardamon
01:26:31I'm going to make a prediction here
01:26:32I may be wrong
01:26:33But I reckon Thelma will love this one
01:26:36Okay, let's see
01:26:37Let's see
01:26:38Go on, go
01:26:39Let's see if I'm right
01:26:40I may be wrong
01:26:41But I just somehow think
01:26:43Mmm
01:26:45Yes, I do
01:26:46And David, is it quite like cake?
01:26:50Yes, like cake
01:26:51Correct, yes
01:26:52It's like cake
01:26:53It's almost like an awful cake
01:26:54Cake
01:26:54Cake
01:26:55Cake
01:26:55So you've got a bit of the pumpkin right in the end
01:26:58And the spice rum just sits in the back
01:27:00And creamy
01:27:00It's just right inside there
01:27:01Very autumn
01:27:02Very autumn
01:27:02Very mellow and fruitful
01:27:04Yeah
01:27:05Oh, we all go for that one
01:27:06That's it
01:27:07What's your last one?
01:27:08So the last one is non-alcoholic
01:27:09And we've gone all the way to Cornwall
01:27:11We've gone with one of my favourite apple
01:27:12Sparking apple juices from Jolly's
01:27:14And just to give it that autumn type feel
01:27:16There's a little bit of cinnamon in there
01:27:17A bit of lemon inside there
01:27:19And a bit of egg white
01:27:20To give it a little bit of froth and texture
01:27:21So it's really nice and light and easy
01:27:23But no alcohol in this one
01:27:24That's lovely
01:27:25Right there
01:27:25Delicious
01:27:25Yeah
01:27:26Oh, yes
01:27:27It really is delicious
01:27:28I was going to call this one
01:27:30The
01:27:30Kind of like Love Essex
01:27:34Or something like that
01:27:34I'd be using Essex as a name
01:27:35But
01:27:35I'll probably
01:27:37I'll probably get charged for using your name
01:27:39Not at all
01:27:40Not at all
01:27:40Well, you're talking about curves and whey
01:27:42Right?
01:27:43So this is the only whey
01:27:44Is Essex
01:27:45Oh
01:27:45Very good
01:27:47Very good
01:27:47Let me just write that down
01:27:49Trademark
01:27:51That is whey
01:27:53That's exciting
01:27:53That's really good
01:27:54A lovely, lovely drink
01:27:55What a day it's been
01:27:57And that's it for today's show
01:27:59Thanks to all my guests
01:28:00Selma, David, Ben
01:28:02And of course
01:28:02Ian
01:28:03Who's cheered us up no end at the end
01:28:05Joining me next week
01:28:06Amanda Redmond
01:28:07And Kelvin and Liz Fletcher
01:28:09And if you can't wait till then
01:28:10You can catch Fletcher's Farm
01:28:12Right after this
01:28:13But until then
01:28:14I'll leave you with these lyrics
01:28:16To one of David's biggest hits
01:28:17Hold me close
01:28:19Don't let me go
01:28:20Oh no
01:28:21Ah yes
01:28:22I love you
01:28:22And I think that you know
01:28:24Do you know how I have the nerve
01:28:26To sing that
01:28:27David Essex
01:28:28I have no idea
01:28:29I wouldn't ask him
01:28:30What I do know is
01:28:32This is going down rather well
01:28:34With all of this
01:28:34Enjoy the rest of your Sunday
01:28:36Cheers all
01:28:36Cheers
01:28:37Cheers
01:28:38Cheers
01:28:38Cheers
01:28:38Cheers
01:28:39Cheers
01:28:39Cheers
01:28:40Cheers
01:28:40Cheers
01:28:40Cheers
01:28:41Cheers
01:28:42Cheers
01:28:43Cheers
01:28:43Cheers
01:28:44Cheers
01:28:44Cheers
01:28:44Cheers
01:28:45Cheers
01:28:45Cheers
01:28:46Cheers
01:28:46Cheers
01:28:47Cheers
01:28:48Cheers
01:28:48Cheers
01:28:48Cheers
01:28:49Cheers
01:28:49Cheers
01:28:50Cheers
01:28:51Cheers
01:28:52Cheers
01:28:53Cheers
01:28:54Cheers
01:28:55Cheers
01:28:56Cheers
01:28:57Cheers
01:28:58Cheers
01:28:59Cheers
01:29:00Cheers
01:29:01Cheers
01:29:03Cheers
01:29:04Cheers
01:29:05Cheers
01:29:06Cheers
01:29:06Cheers
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