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00:11Hello there and welcome to The One Show live on BBC One and I play with Roman Kemp and Alex
00:16Jones
00:16and as we head towards the summer solstice this Sunday we've got quite the show to brighten up
00:21your Friday night. Yes we're joined by a brilliant actor who starred in everything from hard-hitting
00:26dramas like Sherwood to laugh out light comedies like Daddy Issues and tonight David Morrissey will
00:31be telling us about heading to the theatre for a classic tale with a modern twist. We are talking
00:36food in families and a whole heap of revenge perfect. Very good and someone who isn't afraid
00:41to face up to a tricky encounter is Steve Baxhall. He may have got up close and personal with the
00:46world's scariest creatures just like that but tonight Steve will be revealing something even
00:52more scary keeping thousands of children entertained on stage. And talking about performing
00:57live we are joined by Brit Award nominated singer Sienna Spira who's been called the voice of
01:02a generation thanks to hits like these.
01:25And Sienna will be singing her track Material Lover which features in the new Devil Wears Prada film
01:30live at the end of the show. Cannot wait for that. Also tonight with England's first World Cup win
01:36under their belt and Scotland's massive match later on this evening Geoff Brazier has been finding out
01:41how shoppers in Dagnan are embracing football fever as well as how they're preparing for Father's Day this weekend.
01:47So lots to look forward to. We'll say an official hello now to tonight's guests Steve Baxhall, David Morrissey
01:53and Sienna Spiro.
01:58Lovely to see you all. Lots to chat about tonight isn't there but we'll start with Steve and Sienna because
02:03you two are actually at Sir David Attenborough's 100th birthday celebrations at the Royal Albert Hall and Sienna you sang
02:10so beautifully.
02:11Thank you. You sang a Nat King Cole's song Nature Boy. How was that because it was quite the occasion
02:17wasn't it?
02:18I mean that was the most nervous I've ever been in my whole life. I was like waiting backstage with
02:23a bin.
02:24I was really nervous. I mean that is he is my idol and also that is my dream venue and
02:31one of my favourite songs so it was just very nerve wracking but it was the biggest honour of my
02:35life.
02:35The nurse didn't come across. Really? I was shaking up there. Oh bless you.
02:40Steve very quickly as well obviously for you. Sir David is a personal hero of yours. Was it lovely to
02:46thank him in such a special way?
02:47That's exactly right brilliant. It's very rare that you get the opportunity to say a proper thank you to someone
02:52who has given you absolutely everything and you know 5,000 people there in the Royal Albert Hall able to
02:57say thank you for all you've done for us.
02:59It was a really, there wasn't a dry eye in the house. It was very emotional.
03:02Even watching it as well. Yeah. Well we'll be talking to Steve and Sienna more in a moment but first
03:08David now people loved you in Sherwood in Daddy Issues but we have to say congratulations on the huge success
03:14of Tiptoe.
03:16The reactions were off the charts for that drama weren't they?
03:20Yeah I mean you know it's always the thing of putting, it's quite a tough drama.
03:23You know you put so much hard work into it and yeah walking down the street people have been really
03:28sort of vocal about how much they've got moved by the show and some people just came up and shook
03:34my hand and said well done.
03:36So yeah it's really landed very well. You never know when you do a show about how it's going to
03:41be received out there.
03:43But yeah it's been received really really well. Well well deserved. Thank you very much.
03:47So we're going to talk about your new play Horace Dyer and a little bit like Tiptoe you know it
03:52starts off with a shocking event and then kind of rewinds back doesn't it to see how that event came
03:58about.
03:58Yes it does but it's also I mean it's obviously a Greek drama written many years ago but it's updated
04:07by Simon Stone our director and our writer to make it a contemporary story and it's about a family sort
04:13of in crisis really.
04:15But he tells it through different time frames as well and there's revenge there's murder there's lots of stuff but
04:22it's important to say it's also very funny what Simon does with it is he makes it very funny.
04:26There's lots of absurd humor in it and strange sort of characters that come in and sort of behave very
04:34you know so outrageously so we have that as well.
04:38We only I mean someone just told me we opened on the 2nd of July and I was like what
04:43when.
04:44Sorry just told you now.
04:46Yeah.
04:46Well I'd obviously put it in the back of my mind.
04:49Fine.
04:50It suddenly became real just as I was walking on and we only have half the play.
04:56Because he writes as you're going along.
04:58Yeah so we've heard about that.
04:59How does that actually work?
05:01Because so.
05:01Yes how does it work Robin?
05:02Before the rehearsals.
05:03Please tell me this.
05:04What are you doing in rehearsals?
05:06You just kind of turn up and.
05:07You were sitting there saying did you watch the match last night?
05:10Things like that.
05:11So he sort of we have the basis of the play which is the Isola's sort of trilogy and then
05:17we talk about it and we get it on its feet and then he goes away.
05:20And we have the afternoon off and we sort of do a bit of shopping and then he comes back
05:25in the morning and he delivers like five or six pages and we'll read that and then we're sort of.
05:29So it's really strange and a bit nerve wracking I have to say.
05:33Yeah.
05:33Do you know how it's going to finish then?
05:35So I have no idea.
05:37Oh my goodness.
05:38A bit like life.
05:39I have no idea.
05:40So you know I will go and hopefully by the 2nd of July hopefully I do know how it ends.
05:45But at the moment we're all in the dark.
05:48I'm hoping Simon knows how it ends.
05:50That's the one thing.
05:51So it is.
05:52But it's fun.
05:53I mean you know it's that thing of really going into work and everything's sort of buzzing.
05:58You know you've got this nervousness.
06:01You've got these knots in your stomach.
06:02But you know I love that.
06:04I have to say.
06:04I think that's going to sell the ticket.
06:06Yeah absolutely.
06:06Because everybody will think how does it end?
06:08Even David doesn't know.
06:09Even I don't.
06:10Yeah.
06:11It's not like the Traitors where they have five different endings every night.
06:15We will know by the end of it.
06:17But it's really fun.
06:19I'm loving it.
06:20I'm working with this wonderful American actress called Mary Louise Parker.
06:24Two times Tony winner.
06:25Yes.
06:26Everyone keeps telling me.
06:27Thanks very much.
06:28Yeah.
06:29But she is amazing.
06:31She was in the West Wing and she was in a wonderful show called Weeds.
06:35And she's a great actress.
06:36So it's brilliant to do.
06:37It's at the bridge.
06:39So you know what?
06:40I'm really having fun doing it.
06:41It's challenging but it's great.
06:43Fantastic.
06:43And great cast on this.
06:45But obviously we've got to talk about Daddy in the Shoes.
06:47It was so fantastic.
06:48But you and Amy Leowood you formed such a great partnership in a comedy world.
06:53But now you're moving that to a big time film.
06:56Well several big time film in these new Beatles movies.
06:59So there's going to be four movies in total of each of the band members.
07:02You're playing Paul's dad in this film.
07:04I am.
07:04Now obviously as a proud scouter I mean what is it like to step into 60s Liverpool?
07:09It's just amazing.
07:11I mean I can't say too much about it.
07:14Because apart from what's in the press release which is yes I'm playing Paul's dad.
07:18But yeah we're sworn to secrecy.
07:20But it is.
07:20It's a real honour.
07:21Not just to tell the story of the band which obviously is such a huge part of my life.
07:27And I've always been a huge fan but obviously part of my city.
07:31But also to work with those actors and that director and to be part of it is just a real
07:36privilege really.
07:37Yeah.
07:38It's going to be so good.
07:38Really excited for that one.
07:39Yeah well I'm looking forward to it.
07:40Well he's also looking forward to see how his play ends.
07:43Which you can go and see.
07:44And you can see David in the Oresteia at the Bridge Theatre in London from the 2nd of July.
07:50And of course you can watch Daddy Issues and Sherwood on iPlayer.
07:53Still to come after years of searching for the world's deadliest animal.
07:57Steve tells us about how he finally got to fulfil a lifelong dream of meeting one particular creature on his
08:03bucket list.
08:04Yeah plus Sienna will also be performing her hit single Material Love It live.
08:08But before then here's why her music has had an incredible 1.4 billion streams and she's sold out venues
08:14around the world.
08:15You take my life just for the thrill.
08:20I'll take tonight and die on this hill.
08:26So maybe this time, maybe this time, maybe this time you'll feel like I do.
08:36No I'll always be your visitor.
08:40Mmmm.
08:43In your own...
08:52I just love watching you watch it and you're like in shock that that's you!
08:57No, I'm just laughing. This is so funny.
08:59Oh, it's so funny.
09:00But we just heard Dying This Hill here,
09:02and that was a top ten hit. It's a brilliant song.
09:05But a massive pinch me moment when Pink covered it.
09:10Crazy. Crazy. Can't believe it.
09:12How did that feel?
09:14Well, actually, they told me a few days before
09:17it was going to be on the Kelly Clarkson show.
09:18Yeah.
09:19So I thought I was going to get Kelly Clarkson,
09:21like what people call it, but I got Pinked instead.
09:23Oh, wow.
09:24Yeah, she killed her. She's amazing.
09:25She's an icon, isn't she?
09:26She's an icon. She's amazing.
09:28Yeah. I mean, look, I mean, it must have been such a whirlwind,
09:32you know, for you, because you're only 20.
09:34You're going on a world tour next year,
09:37and it was a few years ago that you were recording kind of viral hits
09:40from your bedroom.
09:42How has it been?
09:43Because, I mean, even just a moment ago,
09:44when I said it was 1.4 billion stream, you were like...
09:47I didn't know that.
09:47Didn't even know.
09:48Thank you for telling me.
09:49Yeah, so is it settling in your head,
09:52or are you just riding this out?
09:53I mean, it's mad.
09:55I'm not going to lie.
09:56It's very crazy, and I'm so, like, overwhelmed
10:00but so grateful for everything.
10:02But to be honest, like, I just, I try and be as present as I can,
10:06just, like, enjoy everything, and...
10:08Yeah, but it is mad.
10:09I can't really comprehend some things that happen.
10:11Yeah.
10:12Oh, I could imagine.
10:12No, no.
10:13And you've got your debut album out in a few weeks, Visitor.
10:16Yeah.
10:17Oh, my God.
10:18That's quite personal, that album, isn't it?
10:21Yeah.
10:21Why, do you think?
10:22What are we going to learn about you in that album?
10:24Well, the reason the album is called Visitor, because really that is, like, the way I view myself,
10:29and I kind of, obviously that's a word I've heard so much, but I heard it in a new way,
10:35when somebody said it one time, and I kind of wrote this whole album about this, like, fear of impermanence
10:40I had,
10:41and about the temporary natures of life, and just, like, being aware of how fragile relationships are,
10:48and how fragile, like, my identity is to people, and kind of feeling like a visitor in myself.
10:53And, yeah, it's kind of an album about learning to be okay with that, and learning to, like, allow experiences
10:59to matter,
11:00whilst not trying to force them to be permanent, if that makes sense.
11:03It makes a lot of sense.
11:04Sorry.
11:04I wish I had that Emotional Intelligence 20.
11:06I know.
11:07I'm learning.
11:07I'm learning.
11:08Yeah, I know.
11:09Yeah, listen, you're absolutely smashing it.
11:11You're going to be performing Material Lover for us at the end of the show.
11:14Yes.
11:15Cannot wait for it.
11:16Thank you, me too.
11:16Loads of people are excited to see you perform.
11:17You wrote that song for The Devil Wears Party 2, for the movie, but I'm right in thinking that,
11:22at the beginning, when they approached you about doing a song, you were a little bit worried,
11:25because you thought maybe your songs are too sad for the film.
11:28Yeah, I mean, absolutely.
11:29I went and I wasn't, they allowed me to watch the film early, and doing film music is, like, my
11:33dream.
11:34So I was so, like, excited to talk to you.
11:36I felt quite special.
11:37I felt a bit like a spy.
11:38Yeah.
11:38But I was so excited to watch it.
11:40But, yeah, I left and I just wasn't, I wasn't sure what I was going to make.
11:45But one of the themes in the film is that, sorry.
11:48No, that's okay.
11:50I talk so much and I don't breathe.
11:51No, you're good.
11:52Um, the magazine stops getting printed, and everything kind of becomes digital and, like,
11:57I guess the fashion world starts going online, which is something I really relate to as, you
12:02know, I'm 20 and that's kind of my generation.
12:05And, um, that's kind of what the song's about.
12:07I love tangible things.
12:08I love, like, analogue listening, vinyls.
12:12Um, I love, like, I always take, like, a souvenir of whatever I do.
12:16And, yeah, it's a song about just, like, loving tangible, physical things that you can hold
12:19and kind of a comeback to the calling someone a materialist.
12:22I'd rather be that than not at all.
12:24But it's fine.
12:24It's got that good vibe to it as well at the same time, yeah.
12:27And it was in The Devil Wears.
12:29I know.
12:30Amazing.
12:30I came on theme.
12:32Yes, I like that.
12:33Um, David, you make playlists, don't you, for your characters?
12:36I do, yeah.
12:36Because, I mean, it's a way of getting into characters, isn't it?
12:38Yeah, I always do.
12:39I make two playlists, actually.
12:40So I make a playlist of what I feel the character would be listening to, the type of music they
12:44would
12:44listen to.
12:45But then I do a mood playlist as well.
12:48Oh.
12:48So that when I need to get into a mood for a certain character, like, if I need to get
12:52jacked up, I'll be having something.
12:54If I need to get into a melancholy mood, I'll have something.
12:57Yeah.
12:57So I have two different playlists for characters, yeah.
13:00Steve, when you're going out and seeing sharks, you're not playing the Jaws theme music, are you?
13:03I would recommend that.
13:04I think that would be quite off-brand, wouldn't it?
13:06Yeah, yeah, yeah.
13:07Yeah.
13:08I don't think that would work quite as well.
13:09Yeah, it's going to really get me psyched up for this.
13:11Yeah, I do have a playlist before going on stage.
13:13You know, you've got to, apart from anything else, warm up your vocal cords if you're going
13:16to go on for a couple of hours, just non-stop talking, shouting, yelling, getting sprayed
13:22from head to toe in dinosaur feces.
13:23You know, it takes a little bit of warming up.
13:26I feel like such a fraud sat here right now.
13:28I've got David talking about being an Aeschylus.
13:31I've got Sienna talking about the impermanence of existence.
13:33And I'm talking about doing circus skills in amongst a bunch of audiences.
13:37Are you done all?
13:38I know you all want to do that one.
13:40You're an hero to all the children watching out there.
13:44Sienna's album Visitor will be out on the 3rd of July and you can see her live on tour
13:48around the UK next year.
13:50Yeah, and in a moment, as we say, Sienna will be heading outside to prepare for her performance
13:54of Material Lover, but she's not the only one to embrace a live performance.
13:57Yes, because later this year, Steve here will be taken to the stage to appear in front
14:01of thousands of his fans.
14:03Now, before we talk about that, here's why his CBBC show, Deadly 60, is still inspiring
14:08and educating children all around the world, nearly two decades on.
14:14Oh!
14:15Oh, my gosh!
14:16She just...
14:17It's a bird.
14:18What was that?
14:20It was some sort of bird.
14:21She leapt on it, but she let it go.
14:24She's going again.
14:24She's going after it again.
14:25It looks like it's something small.
14:27It's an armadillo.
14:27No.
14:28No, you're joking me.
14:30Pretty sure it's an armadillo.
14:31Only got a glimpse.
14:32I think you're right.
14:32It is.
14:33She is hunting an armadillo right in front of us.
14:37But it's almost like she's playing with it.
14:39I mean, this just proves how unbelievably adaptable this animal is.
14:45She's flipping it over.
14:47Now, first things first.
14:49Let's check on the armadillo.
14:52Was he or she okay?
14:53Unbelievably, yes.
14:54I think that it just triggered that predatory instinct in the puma that something moved nearby
14:59and it went, oh, this is something I could eat.
15:01And then it went, oh, no, that's kind of like a little bit, you know, shell on the outside.
15:06And it just batted it around like a ball for about ten minutes.
15:09Yeah, like a little cat playing with a mouse.
15:10And then just let it go.
15:11It was amazing.
15:12It's when you see prawns in their shell and you're going to go, I want to eat this, but how?
15:15Yeah.
15:15How am I going to get in?
15:18But, look, meeting those pumas as well, that was a bit of a dream come true for you.
15:22You've been searching for a long time.
15:23They've been our nemesis.
15:25So, like you say, we've nearly 20 years we've been doing Deadly 60.
15:27We've been out in the field for months on end trying to find them and come really, really
15:31close on a couple of occasions.
15:33But this time we not only found them, but we saw them approaching mating, leaping over
15:38fences.
15:39We had interactions between different animals that could have led to like a massive standoff
15:44and instead led to them sharing their prey.
15:46We had predation.
15:48All these things.
15:49A mother with a teeny tiny cub coming as close as I am to you guys right now.
15:52Wow.
15:53And it was absolutely mind-blowing.
15:56What do you do in that?
15:57If they come that close, are you, especially with a cub?
16:00Freeze.
16:00Yeah.
16:01You just completely hold your breath and just film as much as you possibly can.
16:06Try and capture the moment.
16:07Imagine all of the, like you say, tens of thousands of people who are going to be watching that
16:10and savoring every single second.
16:13And just, yeah, hope that she doesn't run off into the distance.
16:16It was magical.
16:17Oh, my God.
16:18But, you know, you've had children on the edge of their seats watching the Deadly 60 and
16:22you're taking it on tour.
16:23Last time you came, you were talking about your big arena tour, which, you know, hopefully
16:28was amazing, was it?
16:29Did it go well in the end?
16:31It was.
16:31It went way better than we expected.
16:32I mean, the kind of, I guess the biggest moment was selling out the O2, at which, you
16:38know, nearly 11,000 people there all cheering and yelling and screaming about animals, about
16:43natural history, about the thing that I so desperately want youngsters to be interested
16:47in was like an absolute career highlight for me.
16:50So we're going back to arenas.
16:51This time we're doing different ones.
16:52So hopefully we can get the same kind of pull in Wembley Arena and, you know, Nottingham
16:57and Sheffield and all over the country.
16:58And I think seeing that reaction, seeing youngsters who have a passion, have something that they're
17:03really, really into and you know that it's something wholesome, something that's going
17:06to give them something positive they can do with their life and with their future is the
17:11best possible thing I could be doing in my life.
17:13Yeah, absolutely.
17:14What have you found, though, is the biggest challenge in putting it all together?
17:18Because there's so much goes into it.
17:20Well, yeah.
17:20I mean, we start with the genesis of life and work through 600 million years of evolution
17:25through to the present day, trying to cram in as much as you possibly can while still
17:29having interactivity with the audience because you have to get feedback from them.
17:33Oh, you have to, yeah.
17:33That's absolutely critical.
17:34But you're trying to zip through everything that's ever happened in natural history on
17:38our planet in a couple of hours.
17:40There's just too much to fit in.
17:42But it's a lot of fun.
17:44We have an absolute scream doing it.
17:45Yeah.
17:46Do you know what, though?
17:47You're an absolute rock star to children.
17:49Yeah.
17:49Did you feel like it when you walked out, Steve?
17:51Were you shocked up like Kylie from the floor?
17:54Oh, my gosh.
17:54It was absolutely incredible.
17:56I mean, at one point, I do ride onto stage on the back of a dinosaur.
17:59Which is a childlike childhood dream.
18:01Gotta go.
18:02Oh, yes, of course.
18:03Pyro.
18:04Confetti.
18:04Elvis in Vegas.
18:05That's what it is.
18:06Yes, exactly.
18:07I love how earlier you were saying, oh, I'm not, you know, these guys, they're doing
18:10this.
18:10Meanwhile, O2, on a dinosaur, pyro.
18:13Sounds out.
18:13Yeah, exactly.
18:15But as we said, you've had such a huge influence on so many people, but particularly children
18:20around the world.
18:22Tell us about Miller, who you met filming in Australia.
18:26Oh, yeah.
18:26Yeah, so I think, you know, I've got to the stage of my career now where I'm recognising
18:29that there are an awful lot of youngsters who have so much to say, so much knowledge,
18:34incredibly eloquent, and also know their subject inside and out.
18:37So one of the things that we've really tried to do now is to connect with those young people
18:40and give them an opportunity to essentially show what they can do.
18:44And this young guy in Australia took us out just off the shore from a big town in Queensland,
18:52and we caught the world's most venomous fish, 10 metres offshore.
18:55This absolutely whacking great big stonefish.
18:58I completely missed it, bearing in mind I've been doing this my whole life.
19:01I pretty much walked over the top of it.
19:02He just walked out and went, oh, there's one.
19:03And, yeah, picked up a stonefish, the world's most venomous fish, right there.
19:07There's people walking past with their kids and stuff.
19:09It was absolutely epic.
19:11And I think seeing that the future of natural history, conservation and zoology is alive and kicking.
19:17There are so many youngsters who have just got unbelievable talent and the future is safe with them.
19:23Oh, fantastic. We've had so many messages come in very quickly.
19:28Steve, Matt has asked, what's your favourite place you've ever filmed in?
19:32I would say that I'd go for the north of the Amazon, Suriname, Guyana, Venezuela,
19:37because the biodiversity is such that if you go out looking for a harpy eagle, you don't find it.
19:41I can turn over a log and I'm going to find a poison dart frog or a bush master or
19:45a bullet ant.
19:47There's always something. So we never go home empty handed.
19:50So great. I love that.
19:52Very good. Well, you can see Steve live on stage in his tour of Deadly Live this October,
19:56and you can watch Deadly 60 on iPlayer.
19:58In just a moment, we are heading outside to enjoy the last of the evening sun
20:02when we join Sienna Spyro for a live performance of a hit song, Material Lover.
20:06But before then, Jeff Brazier has been catching up with shoppers in Essex,
20:09where he discovers it's not just World Cup football on everyone's lips
20:12because it's going to be a busy weekend ahead.
20:17With Father's Day coming up and a lot of football kicking off,
20:21I'm turning up for a shift at the checkout at my local Asda in Dagnum
20:24to see what customers are putting in their baskets.
20:28As a footy fan and a dad, and now a very proud granddad,
20:32I'm sure there's going to be loads to talk about.
20:35Helping me out today is my supervisor, Narinda.
20:38It's basically like a self-service checkout.
20:40Yeah, it is like a self-checkout.
20:41I feel like I prefer coming to a real person.
20:43I hope the customers prefer coming to me today.
20:45Check this out now?
20:46Yeah, why not?
20:47Let's go.
20:48Feeling confident, I'm ready for my first customer.
20:51Hi guys, how are you?
20:52We're good, thank you.
20:53Lots of home furnishings, is it that you've moved house?
20:56No, we haven't.
20:58We are trying to refurbish a room.
21:01Right.
21:02Did you watch the football last night, money chance?
21:04I did.
21:05And did you enjoy it?
21:06It was fabulous.
21:08I had my family around, I had my neighbours around.
21:10Yeah.
21:11And we really enjoyed watching.
21:13Was it the last game scored by Marcus Rashford?
21:15Yeah, Rashford got the last game.
21:16They really got us, yeah, jumping all around in the room.
21:19So good, isn't it?
21:20Yeah.
21:20Did you expect a performance as fun and enjoyable to watch as that?
21:24I didn't expect us to attack as well as we did, but I did expect the bad defending, unfortunately.
21:29So what are you going to do for Daddy on Father's Day?
21:31I want to take him to a restaurant.
21:33That would be lovely.
21:34Lovely.
21:34Dad, what a lovely treat.
21:35I know, this is news to me.
21:36You are loved.
21:38Why is Father's Day special for you?
21:40Just appreciation, really.
21:41Dads, we take on a lot of pressure.
21:43We do a lot of things.
21:44So, yeah, it's nice when the girls, they always show me love, to be fair.
21:47Every day is Father's Day for you, is it?
21:49Almost.
21:49I'd say I'm quite lucky in that sense.
21:51Being my local store, it's not long before a few familiar faces pop up.
21:56What are you guys doing here?
21:58Why are you doing here?
21:59How are you?
22:01How are we doing, team?
22:02How are you?
22:03I'm good.
22:03You all right?
22:04I'm keen to find out how my cousins are getting stuck in with a football.
22:07Good game last night.
22:09So good.
22:10Did you stay up for it?
22:11No.
22:12Oh, you didn't watch it?
22:13Too tired.
22:14Too tired.
22:15She got Mexico in her sweepstakes at school.
22:17How do you feel about that, getting Mexico?
22:19Good.
22:19It won.
22:20For someone who hates football, she's doing so well with me.
22:23What do you win if you win your sweepstakes?
22:25They don't know yet.
22:27Okay.
22:28All this football chat is making me want to test out my skills.
22:32Just stop playing football and get back to the table.
22:35Oh.
22:37Like the World Cup, Father's Day is all about bringing families together.
22:41Well, we're having a barbecue.
22:42Got my family around.
22:43Grandchildren, great-grandchildren.
22:45Yeah.
22:46So, yes.
22:47So it'll be a full house and a full garden.
22:49And I've got to try and cook it on my little barbecue.
22:51Right.
22:52Oh, no.
22:53So is this everything you need for the barbecue?
22:55No, that's just some of it.
22:57I've got nine grandchildren and eight great-grandchildren.
23:00Yeah.
23:00I just had a little great-granddaughter the other day.
23:02Congratulations.
23:03The noise, don't you?
23:04The noise, I know.
23:05But it does stop, though, right?
23:06Well, you know one day what it's like when the boys get married.
23:09I'm a granddad.
23:09I'm a granddad now, but she's not very noisy yet.
23:12Give her a bit of time.
23:13For some, Father's Day is more poignant.
23:17It's one of them days, yeah, that we get through.
23:19For so many, I think, as well.
23:21Like, that's why sometimes, you know, some people are looking forward to it.
23:24Some people aren't.
23:25And some people are both, actually, where it's like,
23:27it's celebrating one person and remembering another person.
23:31Another, yeah.
23:32It's a nice day because the memories are good, so...
23:34That's it.
23:35It prompts you to talk about that person and to think about them.
23:39Celebrating our loved ones can look different for everyone.
23:41This Father's Day, my dad's asked to have the day to himself.
23:45He was like, he wants to go spend it with his friend.
23:48And how do you feel about that?
23:49I mean, it's really about the father being happy, isn't it?
23:51Yeah.
23:51So if he's going to be, like, happiest with his friend...
23:54There you go.
23:56Right, this will last you how long?
23:58Whoa!
23:58Five years?
23:59Quite a few weeks.
24:00Yeah.
24:02I've got twin daughters.
24:03How old are they?
24:05They were 50 early this year.
24:07Well, congratulations.
24:08Still my two little girls.
24:09They'll probably take me out for a meal, me and my wife out for a meal somewhere.
24:14Probably my best day is the day they were born.
24:16Right.
24:18So that's the end of my shift and I've had an absolutely lovely time.
24:21I don't know what I loved more, speaking about football or being a dad and a granddad.
24:26But one thing is for sure, everyone that I've met is going to have a really lovely weekend.
24:34Oh, thanks so much to Geoff and everyone there in Dagnam.
24:37And good luck to Scotland against Morocco later on.
24:39A little bit awkward though.
24:41It's yours.
24:42I've got Morocco in the sweepstake.
24:43Have you been keeping up with Jordan in the World Cup?
24:45Have they?
24:46No.
24:46Have they played yet?
24:47Next game.
24:47They've played one, lost one, but they can get there.
24:50I've got a lot of faith.
24:51And a big thanks, of course, to all of our guests for joining us tonight.
24:54We have got the night off on Monday to make way for the World Cup.
24:57So we'll be back on Tuesday keeping cool in the studio with actors Hannah Waddingham,
25:01Octavia Spencer, J.K. Simmons and Tom Brittany.
25:04Yeah, but for now, seeing us into the weekend, it's Sienna Spyro with Material Lover.
25:21I like these things you can buy with money.
25:26On a day that's wrong, but a day that's sunny.
25:31Pick it up with my hands, put it out on sale.
25:34They can't do it like me, can't do it like me.
25:40When it's all going up like a bun and a fever.
25:45My feet on the ground like a super feeler.
25:49And I don't know much, but I know this one thing.
25:53They can't do it like me, can't do it like me.
25:59I crave a real connection.
26:01I like to turn the page with my hands and my nails.
26:06They match my summer shade.
26:09Some call that superficial to wanna touch the cover.
26:13I'm a material lover, but I'm a material lover.
26:20Yeah, material lover.
26:24I want a real thing now.
26:27Mmm, I want a real thing now.
26:34I did, I did, I did.
26:37Oh, oh, oh.
26:40Material lover.
26:43Hey, yeah.
26:46Ooh, ooh, ooh.
26:49Duh, duh, duh, duh, duh, duh, duh, duh.
26:52Oh, yeah.
26:55Material, yeah.
26:57Oh, yeah.
26:58Material, yeah.
26:58Say it when you turn.
27:00I can give a real thing to you.
27:03Oh, material, yeah.
27:06I'll show you when you're done
27:08I can't give up real things like you
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