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Short filmTranscript
00:00The noughties heralded a digital revolution. BBC Wales began to put their extensive archive online and make programmes accessible away
00:09from TV.
00:11We could watch on our computers, internet and our phones.
00:16What didn't change though was the wild and the wonderful things we reported on.
00:22In this series we'll be taking a look at some of the stories making the headlines in Wales in the
00:27early days of the 21st century.
00:32Let's have a look at what we were reporting on in 2007.
00:37A new living history show.
00:41Strictly starts a dance craze across Wales.
00:44And the remote cottage in the spotlight because of a world famous rock band.
00:50And it was around this time that people were really starting to get to grips with creating and posting their
00:57own content online.
01:00Older users surfed the web to look for bits of information provided for us by websites.
01:04But now the big change is that the content online is increasingly put there by the users themselves.
01:13And there were some young early influencers too.
01:16Television does not figure greatly in the life of 16-year-old Angharad John,
01:21who started posting her short videos on YouTube before some of us had even heard of it.
01:27Sometimes I do get embarrassed about the type of videos that I upload and people comment me saying,
01:33oh, I really liked what you did then, you have some really good ideas.
01:37Or in the case of some of my cooking videos, oh, I know to make that now, thanks.
01:43It gives me like this real buzz.
01:45Today we're going to be making Angel Delight.
01:49My main audience seems to be American.
01:52My YouTube site, I've got about 100,000 views or so.
01:57And that's on each video.
02:00So I'm quite popular on there.
02:03Today we shall be making some jelly.
02:07I'm using the colour red because it's like blood.
02:10YouTube is television in my eyes.
02:13It's great, isn't it? Anybody can be a star.
02:17But there was only one star at the chippy in Pembroke.
02:20And that was Connie, who was serving customers on her 100th birthday.
02:26Hey, hey, hey, hey.
02:29Is that a Mohican or is that a hat?
02:31Happy birthday to Pembroke's Mrs. Connie Brown.
02:37Oblivious to all this fuss, Connie is still hard at it.
02:41A hundred years young today and still working.
02:46There's plenty more fish to fry and that's the secret to her success.
02:51God save the Queen.
02:53We're told now that fish and chips, we shouldn't eat too many fish and chips.
02:56What do you think of that?
02:59No.
03:01I believe in eating fish and chips.
03:04I've been cooking them now for 79 years.
03:12Some customers have been coming here all their lives.
03:15Oh, I think it's absolutely fabulous to think that she's lived this long and still working today.
03:20You know, at 100, it's a big achievement for her.
03:23And I'm just so proud that I know her.
03:26Although Mrs. Brown still works every day, there's plenty of family to lend a hand
03:32and continue the tradition she began back in 1928.
03:36My dad's involved with his wife, my mum, and my brother's taken over now.
03:41And, I mean, it's all complete family business.
03:44And then my son is waiting in the wings to take over.
03:49And waiting he is.
03:51Ten-year-old Tom's looking forward to the day he can give great-grand a break.
03:55I, like, would like to take over what she does
03:58and make her have some rest and stuff and doing hard work and stuff.
04:03But Connie has no plans to retire just yet, and she's still as popular as ever.
04:09They're the best chips in Canada.
04:11Class, eh?
04:14Maybe that's the secret.
04:16Working hard and a daily bag of chips.
04:22Next up, a postman who ended up making a very special delivery.
04:28I was just talking to Mel, saying, you know, the paramedics won't be long.
04:33Her neighbour then, Tracy, came out with a blanket.
04:36And before we know it, Mel was on her back and little Sophia arrived in the world.
04:41It's one of the most amazing things I've ever experienced, to be honest with you.
04:45Definitely a first-class delivery.
04:46Now, 2007 was the year that I joined BBC Wales,
04:51and I arrived in the October.
04:53By November, I was doing this for children in need
04:57when I was four months pregnant.
05:01Now my name's Lucy O, and I read the news.
05:04Oh, my goodness.
05:05Mess with me and you'll get a bruise.
05:07I wear high heels like that Tom Cruise.
05:10See if you can guess where I've got tattoos.
05:12I still know it.
05:28I love how goldy-looking Jane are just like,
05:31what have we done with these newsreaders?
05:44Very difficult to follow that, but let's try with grit-eating sheep.
05:49Getting their morning sugar fix,
05:51the Halkin Mountain sheep are risking death to enjoy a sweet...
05:54Oh, that looks like an accident waiting to happen.
05:56...animals in harm's way.
05:58In the nearby village of Lixam...
06:00No, I'm not making this up.
06:01Local farmer, Elvin Evans,
06:03has to fight his way through a woolly wall
06:05after a frosty night.
06:07There were dozens of them,
06:08all stuck in the middle of the road
06:12with their heads down,
06:13licking away.
06:15Completely puzzled me.
06:16Normally they will get out of the way of the car,
06:18but on this particular day,
06:20they were so intoxicated and addicted
06:22with the material on the road
06:26that they refused to budge.
06:28It's all because of this 2,000 tonnes of rock salt
06:30with a 3% molasses derivative added
06:33to stop the grit bouncing off the road.
06:35Well, it certainly doesn't look any different
06:37from the grit that you'd see on the roads everywhere.
06:39But the one thing that I have noticed,
06:41and you'll have to trust me on this,
06:43is that there's a very sweet smell coming off it,
06:45almost like caramel, something like that.
06:47Now, don't lick it, Matthew,
06:49because I wouldn't put that past you.
06:51Flintshire Council staff believe
06:52sheep have always had a greed for grit.
06:54Sheep have always been attracted to salt,
06:56as we all know, the sheep like salt anyway.
06:59And I think it's just that it's on the road.
07:02It isn't bouncing off as it used to do.
07:04It used to bounce off into the verges,
07:06into the hedges.
07:06It actually sticks to the road better.
07:08And I think the sheep are just attracted to it naturally
07:10because it's a salt.
07:12So we're seeing if the theory holds true.
07:15Right, well, I've got two bags of salt here,
07:17one sweet and one sour.
07:19Dave, your theory is that the sheep will like both equally.
07:23Yes, I think you'll find...
07:24I'll leave it to you to do the testing,
07:26but I think you'll find they'll like both piles of salt.
07:29Oh, it's like MasterChef for sheep.
07:43It seems they're a little sheepish.
07:45The taste test is inconclusive then,
07:47but whether it's sweet or salt,
07:49the mountain sheep are lapping it up.
07:51That was such a good idea,
07:53but I really feel for Matthew
07:54because it's a nightmare as a reporter
07:56when you have something that you really hope is going to come off
07:59and then it just doesn't.
08:01They say never work with children or animals
08:03and those sheep just weren't prepared to play ball, were they?
08:07Now, it was back in 2004
08:10that Strictly Come Dancing first started
08:13and by 2007, Strictly Fever was waltzing its way across Wales.
08:21Lloyd and Eleanor are sambering their way to stardom.
08:25Since they were three years old,
08:27they've been perfecting their routines
08:29and now they're aiming to tango their way to the top together.
08:33They're about to perform in front of millions
08:35for the baby ballroom crown.
08:37So cute!
08:38I love all the dancing,
08:39the hair, the make-up, the shoes, all the fuss,
08:42but my favourite is competing
08:44because when I compete,
08:46I just get this buzz feeling
08:47and I'm really excited and happy.
08:50I love the bounce and the samba.
08:55I like the snapping legs and cha-cha.
08:58I just love all the dances, really.
09:00Lloyd's talent is in the blood.
09:02His parents and grandparents are dancing champions,
09:05but now people who've never danced before
09:08are taking to the floor
09:09and it seems it's all down to the revival of TV shows
09:13like Strictly Come Dancing.
09:15Strictly has done an awful lot to improve the image
09:19and we've got a lot more gentlemen
09:22coming along with their wives now to learn
09:24and lots more younger people coming in all together.
09:28Do you know, I've just found Lloyd Perry on his social media
09:31and he is still dancing to this day
09:35and winning amateur championships.
09:37That's so lovely, isn't it?
09:39I might send him a little message.
09:41Now, if you're ever worried
09:43that your garden's a bit overgrown,
09:45the grass is growing too fast on the lawn,
09:47well, you've got nothing to worry about.
09:49Take a look at this.
09:50A greenhouse roof smashed
09:52at Triborth Botanic Gardens in Bangor University.
09:55In fact, the culprit was this plant,
09:57which had bloomed in dramatic fashion.
10:00It sprouted nearly six feet in two days.
10:03That is freaking me out.
10:04It's like a triffid.
10:06I went away for a weekend
10:07and nothing seemed untoward
10:09until I got back on Monday morning
10:11and I noticed the glass had broken,
10:14two panes completely broken.
10:15I looked more carefully
10:17and the flowering shoot that you see the bottom of behind me
10:20had broken its way through the glass like a fist.
10:23For Nigel, it was the end of 28 years of waiting.
10:271979 was when he planted the seed.
10:29But its future isn't so rosy.
10:32After blossoming, these plants gradually die.
10:35But it'll still have its uses.
10:37The sap, which fuels its growth,
10:39is used to make tequila.
10:41Maybe that'll help the gardeners here forget
10:43about that smashed roof.
10:45Oh, every cloud has a silver lining.
10:47Now, in 2007, two villages in Wales
10:51were battling it out to be the best.
10:53In one corner, we have Lerenie.
10:55In the other, Overton-on-D.
10:58Two villages, one south, one north.
11:01But in the tug-of-war for the title,
11:03there can only be one winner.
11:06And it's Pembrokeshire's Lerenie.
11:09While they all tuck in to celebrations,
11:12here's what the judges found so special.
11:14First up, the people who live here.
11:19Last year, the post office and local shop
11:22was facing closure.
11:23So the villages clubbed together,
11:25took it over and helped turn it into a success.
11:29I think the biggest attribute Lerenie's got
11:31is its determination from its residents.
11:34We have several examples.
11:36For instance, we have a local minibus.
11:37It is always the people who make a place.
11:40...looking at the moment.
11:41But when this village decides they want something,
11:43they have the determination and the talent
11:45to make it happen.
11:47Then there was the group push for broadband,
11:50winning them another category, communication.
11:53What does that say?
11:55Basically, we're a very remote, cut-off village.
11:57No-one would give us broadband.
11:58BT said no, they couldn't.
11:59So we all got together.
12:00We dug deep in our pockets,
12:01and we had a system installed.
12:03It's beamed from the next town.
12:04It's totally built by us,
12:06and it means that all our businesses
12:07and our people in the village can have broadband.
12:10Although it is a beautiful place,
12:12it's not Lerenie's looks that matter.
12:14This award was won by the people who live here
12:17and who make this village the best in Wales.
12:21Now, I actually have something in common
12:23with Dame Tannigray Thompson.
12:24It is definitely not my sporting ability,
12:27but we both presented the same show.
12:30We both presented X-Ray,
12:31and this was after her Paralympic success.
12:35But this was the year
12:37that she actually retired from competition.
12:41Tannigray Thompson heading home
12:43from the Athens Paralympics in 2004.
12:45She didn't know it then,
12:47but that would be her last appearance
12:49on what had become virtually her own personal stage.
12:52Fifteen Paralympic medals she won,
12:54the first of bronze in Seoul in 1987.
12:57But today came the announcement
12:59her time for Great Britain and Wales was over.
13:03One of the highlights was being team captain
13:05at Commonwealth Games last year
13:07and getting to carry the flag out
13:09in front of the Welsh team.
13:10And unbelievably emotional
13:12and a huge honour and great fun.
13:14And I got to boss the young ones around.
13:16Her success on the track
13:18was mirrored on the roads
13:19with six London Marathon wins.
13:21It was an achievement
13:23that left one of Wales'
13:24all-time athletics greats
13:26recognising another.
13:28It would leave a huge hole,
13:29not just in Paralympic sport,
13:31but in sport itself,
13:32because she's a shining example, really.
13:34A great personality.
13:35And really somebody who's very inspirational
13:38to many sports stars.
13:41But as for putting her racing chair
13:43into mothballs,
13:44that's still a long way off,
13:45reckons her father,
13:46who this morning was catching up
13:48with the news home in Cardiff.
13:49It's for fun now.
13:51It's like I used to play golf.
13:53Not very seriously.
13:54But of course she races to win.
13:5620 years of competing at that level
14:00is just incredible.
14:06Now I remember reporting on this
14:09and I thought it was an absolutely great idea.
14:11A digital pet.
14:13It may look like a watch,
14:15but this is a fizzy,
14:16a digital pet that loves to keep fit.
14:19It's being developed by a firm in Bristol
14:21and there are only four in the world so far.
14:24Today it's the turn of Yehan and Megan King
14:27from Cardiff to try it out.
14:39Fizzy stands for Physical Electronic Energizer
14:42and it aims to motivate children
14:44to keep fit and healthy.
14:46It measures heart rate and motion
14:48and the more active the child,
14:50the happier the fizzy.
14:51They've got an accelerometer
14:52which measures your movement
14:54and a heart rate sensor
14:55which measures your heart
14:56and it works out what sort of activity you're doing
14:58and if you're looking after yourself
14:59and being really physically active
15:00then it'll look after your fizzy
15:01and help him grow.
15:02The fizzy's website will allow children
15:04to compare notes about their virtual pets.
15:07We have a lot of gadgets now
15:09that do this kind of thing
15:10but this was really innovative at the time.
15:14Very smart device
15:16but I think it wouldn't be very popular with kids
15:22because they just want to exercise.
15:26Yehan not impressed at all.
15:28It really surprises me.
15:29I thought kids would have loved that.
15:31Asking children what they think
15:33and refining the fizzy accordingly.
15:35The next step is to find a business partner
15:38to help them get these new look pets
15:39into the shops.
15:43Now did you ever apply
15:45or even think about applying
15:47for the BBC Wales series Coal House?
15:50It was a kind of living history experiment
15:53where members of the public would live as people did years ago
15:58and it looked really tough going.
16:01After their first shift at the mine
16:04the men now face the same gruelling walk back
16:07an hour and a half in the cold pouring rain
16:10still covered in the filth of the working day.
16:13That puts my commute into perspective.
16:15In the 20s
16:16women had to provide a hot dinner and bath
16:19on their husband's return
16:20so the pressure's on at Stacks.
16:23I'm so glad some things have changed.
16:24I do have on the menu
16:28lamb cooked in a rather greasy
16:31set of vegetables.
16:32It just seems to take so long
16:34to get anything cooked.
16:36I thought I'll get all this ready
16:37by the time the boys come in
16:38it'll all be ready
16:39and I think they've got about another two hours
16:40of cooking to go
16:41and the kids are starving
16:42and I haven't got any bread
16:43so we're just
16:46to play it by here really.
16:48The miners arrive home safe
16:51but shattered
16:52and all Kertin Griffiths wants
16:54is a good hearty meal.
16:58What the hell did you do?
17:01Hmm, a bit rude.
17:03I think his wife needs some cheerleaders.
17:06The Phoenix cheerleaders
17:07have recently reformed their act
17:09after a break of several years.
17:11If you go back in time
17:13to the late 90s
17:14they were then known as Heatwave
17:15and were getting recognition
17:17for their act
17:17on both sides of the Atlantic.
17:20And now back to present day
17:21and they've dusted off
17:22their pom-poms
17:23and sequined dresses
17:24and have started to relive
17:26some of their past glories.
17:28We spent so much time together
17:30and we did so much.
17:31It was our lives
17:33and then we just stopped.
17:34I think everybody should do
17:35interviews like this
17:35just holding a ponytail.
17:36I want to go back.
17:39And back they've come
17:40with a few high kicks
17:42and a remixed Bon Jovi track.
17:44They took this act
17:45to the International Cheerleading Championships
17:47in Telford
17:48and they saw off
17:49the younger competition
17:49to be crowned champions again.
17:53Score sheets were amazing.
17:54We had them back
17:55and there was a lot of wows,
17:56beautiful skills,
17:57all that sort of thing.
17:58So we were so chapped.
17:59Now when I sent this clip
18:00to Claire Summers recently
18:02she said she couldn't believe
18:04that she was given this job to do
18:06because she absolutely hates flying.
18:09Alicante and now Anglesey.
18:11Travelling north to south
18:12usually means many hours
18:14but now you can get there
18:16in an hour.
18:17If you don't like flying
18:18it's not a plane
18:19you really want to go on.
18:20For three years
18:21from the Welsh Assembly government
18:22to operate two flights a day
18:24Monday to Friday.
18:26Leaving on time
18:27we boarded the Jetstream 31
18:29Anglesey Bound.
18:32Now the seatbelt signs are off
18:34and we're well into our flight.
18:35The first thing you notice
18:36when you come on board
18:37it is pretty cramped.
18:40Now this plane carries 18 passengers
18:42and the flight will cost you
18:43£50 each way
18:45but you can travel
18:46for as little as £15
18:48if you book in advance.
18:50And all this starts
18:51on May the 8th.
18:52What a pro.
18:53You'd never know
18:54she wasn't enjoying that.
18:55We are just under an hour
18:57from leaving Cardiff
18:58and we've arrived
18:59in sunny Anglesey.
19:01And research says
19:02up to 150 cars per day
19:04can leave Bangor
19:05to head for South Wales
19:06for business.
19:07You can't fly from Cardiff
19:09to Anglesey anymore.
19:10The route stopped
19:11in 2022.
19:16Oh, what's occurring?
19:19Well, 2007
19:21saw the start
19:22of Gavin and Stacey
19:24which became
19:25one of our most
19:27loved series
19:28and it was in this year
19:30that we were first introduced
19:31to Nessa
19:33Shanessa Jenkins.
19:36What are you?
19:37Hiya, love.
19:38Where's your staff?
19:39There she is.
19:40Well, that's it.
19:41I got my sling,
19:42packet of feminine wipes
19:43and 60 Regal.
19:44What more do I need?
19:45What about you?
19:46Tatterbrush?
19:46I got Tic Tacs.
19:51Oh, tell me you are joking.
19:55We're only going for one night.
19:58I'm with Stacey on this one.
20:07This year,
20:08rock legends Led Zeppelin
20:09were on tour.
20:11So,
20:11why wasn't this good news
20:13for the owner
20:14of a remote cottage
20:15nor my chyntleth?
20:17This is how the band
20:18chose to remember
20:19Broner Ayr,
20:20images from Led Zepp's
20:22official website,
20:23the cottage
20:24which inspired an album
20:25and the album track
20:26of the same name.
20:28It was the tranquility
20:29which attracted the band
20:30to Mid Wales in 1970
20:32after a hectic tour of America.
20:34Led Zeppelin's fame
20:36still brings fans here.
20:38What surprises me
20:39is that Led Zepp fans
20:40ever managed
20:41to find this place
20:42up a long track
20:44through two farm gates
20:45and then this sign
20:47and you're still not there.
20:50But eventually,
20:51you do find the cottage
20:52tucked into the hillside
20:54and today's owner,
20:56not a Led Zepp fanatic
20:57but a church in Wales clergyman,
20:59the Reverend John Dale.
21:01I love that contrast.
21:02All that enamoured
21:03with his connection
21:04to 70s rock history.
21:06Over the years,
21:07it's caused a few problems.
21:08They have fans coming up
21:09regularly
21:10all over the world.
21:11Last week,
21:11I had six Italians
21:12about 18 months ago
21:14somebody broke in
21:15and stole an old trumpet.
21:16I have to tell them
21:16it wasn't one of
21:17Led Zeppelin's trumpets.
21:18Even Bronner Eyre
21:19has name signs
21:20been pinched over the years.
21:22We've lost three
21:24slate nameplates
21:25and one wooden nameplate
21:26over the years.
21:27So now there's a big boulder
21:29and I defy anyone
21:30to take that.
21:31It actually must be
21:32a bit of a nightmare.
21:33Just wants to be
21:33left in peace.
21:35And that's why
21:35the band came here
21:37all those years ago.
21:41When this van pulls up,
21:42people in Merthyr
21:43are doing a double take.
21:47Morning.
21:48As they may think,
21:49the cream of the premiership
21:50is now dropping off
21:51their pints.
21:52Could it be
21:53Manchester United
21:54manager Alex Ferguson?
21:56Of course not.
21:57But it is
21:58milkman
21:58Alan Mullings.
22:03You get people
22:04coming up
22:05and asking you
22:05for an autograph.
22:06I explain to them
22:07that I'm not Alex Ferguson
22:08but nevertheless
22:09they're happy.
22:10They're walking away
22:11with Alan Mullins' autograph
22:12are they?
22:13Yeah, I do explain to them
22:14and obviously
22:15with a Welsh accent
22:16I would have thought
22:16that they would have
22:18understood that I'm not
22:18Alex Ferguson
22:19but they seem happy.
22:24Well, it's a freezing cold
22:25morning in Merthyr
22:26and while Sir Alex
22:27is most probably
22:28worrying about
22:28squad selection,
22:30Alan's got
22:30semi-skimmed
22:31on his mind.
22:32Four semi,
22:33four skimmed
22:34and two orange juice.
22:35Have you got that?
22:35Of course I've got it.
22:36Four four two.
22:37Classic.
22:39Here we go, Al.
22:40Although,
22:41do people in Merthyr
22:42mistake him for
22:43the famous football manager?
22:45Is Alex Ferguson
22:45not a person,
22:46is it?
22:48What do I say to you
22:49it is Alex Ferguson?
22:50I'd probably believe him.
22:51Would you?
22:52Yeah.
22:53Why would you think
22:54Alex Ferguson
22:55is delivering the milk
22:55in Merthyr?
22:56I wouldn't,
22:56honestly, no.
22:58Can I shake his hand?
22:59Yeah.
22:59Do you want to shake his hand?
23:00Is it Alex Ferguson?
23:01No, it's Alan Mullins.
23:03I'll still shake his hand anyway.
23:06All right, bud.
23:07Cheers, mate.
23:07Alex Ferguson, yeah.
23:11Alex Ferguson, of course.
23:13He does look like Alex Ferguson, right?
23:16Look like, maybe.
23:17But Ferguson is just as famous
23:19for his short fuse
23:20and bad temper.
23:21After all,
23:22he was responsible
23:23for giving Beckham
23:24this injury.
23:25So, does Alan share
23:26Sir Alex's personality traits?
23:28I tend to be quite placid
23:30and I'm sort of
23:31an easygoing person.
23:33So, you're not the hairdryer?
23:35No, I'm not the hairdryer at all.
23:39This year,
23:40some famous faces
23:41were trying to learn Welsh
23:43on the telly
23:44and their challenge
23:46was to perform
23:47Sospen Vach
23:48for children in need.
23:50Mair baben
23:51in a creed
23:52wedi
23:53taffi
23:55Oh, that's actress
23:56Di Botcher.
23:57That is Big Brothers
23:59Glyn Wise
24:00teaching her.
24:00The second verse
24:02was a shock.
24:05Hadn't thought
24:06there was a second verse
24:07but
24:09again,
24:09we went through
24:10the actions
24:11and
24:12a lot of it
24:13is similar,
24:13very similar
24:14but it's just
24:15trying to wrap your head
24:16around something
24:17brand new, isn't it?
24:18Come on,
24:18the domination.
24:19Mair bis
24:20Mary Ann
24:21wedi
24:22brie
24:22She sounds amazing.
24:25Not just her voice
24:26but the Welsh
24:26is brilliant too.
24:27Got to sing it
24:28in front of an audience
24:30and
24:31that could make
24:33the knees knock.
24:35OK, let's saddle up now
24:36for a story
24:37about a really impressive
24:3812-year-old boy.
24:40Mickey Bowen
24:41grew up with horses.
24:42I used to ride
24:44little ponies
24:44when I was like
24:45three or four years old.
24:47Now 12,
24:48he's graduated
24:49onto something
24:50a little bigger.
24:51Mickey wants to be
24:52a trainer
24:53and he's already
24:54well on his way.
24:55For the last six months
24:57he's spent nearly
24:58every spare minute
24:59with his horse
25:00football crazy.
25:01I wake up
25:02at five
25:02and look him out
25:03then I ride him out
25:05and feed him
25:06then after
25:07then I get
25:08a quick shower
25:09and then go
25:10get changed
25:10then go to school
25:11then about eight o'clock.
25:13There is no way
25:14my son would have
25:14got up at that time.
25:15That's real dedication.
25:17Best.
25:17Dad Peter
25:18is a top class
25:19trainer
25:20who's produced
25:21many a winner.
25:22He thinks
25:23Mickey's got
25:23what it takes.
25:24He's followed me
25:25around since he was
25:26about five
25:26so he should know
25:27a fair bit by now.
25:28He's got a huge
25:29advantage
25:29the fact that
25:30he follows
25:31Karen and I
25:31around all the time
25:32and he probably
25:33knows more now
25:34at 12 than I knew
25:35when I was 30.
25:36And Mickey
25:36is putting that
25:37to his advantage.
25:39After months
25:40of practice
25:40he entered
25:41football crazy
25:42for a race
25:43at Weatherby.
25:44Mickey was so excited
25:45he had to be
25:46sent home to watch.
25:48I went to school
25:49I felt really ill
25:50I felt really nervous
25:51so I came home.
25:52Oh bless him.
25:54It was really good
25:55to see him win.
25:56That win
25:56netted Mickey
25:57£2,500
25:59in prize money.
26:01Wow!
26:01As he showed me
26:02the less glamorous
26:03side
26:03mucking out
26:04and grooming
26:05I wondered
26:06how Mickey
26:07might want to
26:07spend his cash.
26:09Any ideas
26:09what you're going
26:10to spend it on?
26:11No, no yeah, no.
26:12With £2,500
26:13you could pay
26:14someone else
26:14to look after him.
26:15Yeah but I
26:16like looking after him
26:18myself
26:19because I enjoy it.
26:21Mickey's now
26:22looking ahead
26:23to football crazy's
26:24next race.
26:25He wouldn't give me
26:26any tips
26:27but let's hope
26:28the winning streak
26:29continues.
26:33Well do you know
26:34that horse training
26:35dream came true
26:37he's got his own
26:38stables
26:38and he's getting
26:40some good results too.
26:45Do you know
26:46it's always
26:47a beautiful moment
26:48isn't it
26:49when somebody
26:50with a hidden talent
26:51gets their moment
26:53in the spotlight
26:54and their chance
26:55to shine
26:55and in 2007
26:57telephone salesman
26:59Paul Potts
27:00just stole our hearts
27:02when he won
27:03Britain's Got Talent.
27:32PIANO PLAYS
27:47¶¶
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28:29Next time, it's 2008.
28:32Comedian Rod Gilbert explores teen tribes,
28:36we meet some canine crooners
28:38and the Welsh link to a famous children's book.
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28:53¶¶
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