And with respect So Labor's reforms to how all large businesses and public utilities are governed and owned and regulated we believe will genuinely unable them to take back control the Swedish authorities have dropped a rape investigation into the founder of Wiki Leaks Julian a song prosecutor said that although the woman who made the allegation in 2010 was credible the evidence had weakened over time b.b.c. News. We might tracks to Ambridge shortly but 1st a look ahead to some tracks of a different kind. Niter all kinds of remarks. 30 minutes of uninterrupted sonic discovery 100 from the b.b.c. Music archives. There unearthing unheard songs and sound. 6 a magical late night musical adventure. Night tracks the archive remakes on Thursday nights at 11 on b.b.c. Radio 3 and on b.b.c. Sounds. Now already are for Elizabeth's not wasting any time in the office. Alert list of. Oh Hi Ross. Bring your coffee Oh thank you you know what time it is I know I know I went before my alarm again you know sleep well it's just anxiety when my subconscious has free reign I told myself that when that happens I'm not allowed to meet in bed I have to get up and get something done so what are you working on good stories in the attic the night only has the name I've come up with for the show I thought a reminder of the atmospheric location at work so I like it read by Professor Jim Lloyd now that we found on a rate we want to get some publicity out of it I mean mailing the local papers in the radio station suggesting an interview and I wondered about putting excerpts of gin reading on social media so if we can get a bit of a buzz going I just had the fame doesn't go to his head maybe if you do some interviews yourself you're clearly fired up about. James the star if you say. Most to see so energized thanks and how you things seem a little better between you only 2 things are they not right in that we had a nice time at the concert we went on Saturday I thought so then on Sunday. It will be fine let's leave it out oh no I'm done here let me just say listen male Jim's coming in later just look at the attic space just want to remind myself what we've got up there before he arrives. All done time to crack on with the day. Of school they're. Just so yes he left last night. So I pinned you to a bus stop of some no just pegged to the typical elf couldn't even be both the dislike of boy that's just the way it is no point expected him to hang around exactly you know about how how come no one told me oh I only just found out you know so what happened that you can have a bust or no we did not have a book you just left well no surprise there I suppose if we check I don't know valuables and I say don't talk about your own family like that sorry your own cool he's a long way off he was a wonder now I'm not trying to discuss it any further looks to deliver who I believe still need fading now that we've sold many you order books only Off you go to the things on the Moon Yeah well Christmas is still a war why you can forget about only a mistletoe or just ain't got the talking you know what it will be like yeah and we can collect it for you no trouble many hands and all on it if you like don't go overboard mind but their job is selling much in your own. I'm. Sorry I'm not sure you are. That is by at least a Prius the attic is a good place to scare people Ok you couldn't help me with this trunk Yeah sure I'm just trying to find a few things we might want to use as props right it's not grab this and thanks I see me or hear about mum. Would you guess. But that's just me. And you haven't spoken to let it. Fall much. When I don't get why the rest of you. Are quite so unfussy even Kenton didn't see my face when I took him up maybe because the idea of our mum getting married isn't something to get faced about so he said the same thing to you. So honest Kenton and I haven't spoken. Who are sure that David you want to yes she is just hoping for a long engagement says she'll be able to officiate at their wedding what she said that I'm teasing she was surprised like we all were but she thinks Len It would make a wonderful husband to you it's got nothing to do with Len that it's Yes well I don't know who I just feel like I'm in a minority of one you. Can't prove someone sit down you will think it's great so tell me what's really bothering you. Look in your age yeah. Well you know around doing. No You know I thought I reckon I have probably enough for now you had your dad said well you weren't serious you all they seem pretty serious today only just so I am required to for the past few days Yeah well Paul I mean it with things get back to normal I suppose when you thought you know there's much things to look forward to now I'm a mom depend on the profits from the kids to get them through Christmas do you know what I'd like only services even tell you who work only the fruits you know they'll be many of us around the table this year take care may well be the dance with asteroid and George and care spending the day with them down the seas and pulling out all the stops this you know. Just be you and me. Puppy Well we best try Mike an extra good one and how we go I don't know but it's the last Christmas before we move to number one maybe you make a try selling the turkey stilted Oh yeah props well same with all the mistletoe just because that I think don't mean that way come on let's all together makes a fortune Oh yeah well we so much we got any better early days. Actually Well I know exactly what we should do fantastic but you want to tell me to take faith how could you manage replace dad he and Mom spent over 50 years together maybe that's why maybe it's because they were together for so long I just can't imagine mum wanting to be married to someone else. I know that city has that's been gone 10 years what's he got to do with me anyway. I've had exactly the same thoughts about Lillian Freddy Jimmy. And I don't have anyone in the moment but I'd like to think that maybe someday then might be someone out there come on that's different for a start Lilian for it is still kids 1020 next month and I'm 60. The point I'm trying to make is that I have they done to stand that you can love someone and still want to move on and a part of my heart will always belong to night John and anyone I met would have to accept that that's a part of who I am it doesn't mean I don't want someone to hold and talk to unlawfully of this if i'm sorry don't be sorry I'm just saying mom might be almost 90 but there's no reason she shouldn't feel the same No but it's easier for me I didn't live with her. Yeah there is that wherever they decide to live it'll be a big adjustment because it will. Sort of feel like a father being asked to give his daughter away Ok that is silly peek at what's in. The end of the day David what's important is that Mum's happy yeah it's sweet of learned to want to know how we feel but it's not up to us. I suppose it's just funny how you cling on to things I guess I'm going to have to move on to. I'm sorry David but Jim 000 of course I need to go downstairs to meet you know absolutely fabulous it is a new day we don't often I just think that if Mum wants to marry Leonard's then we need to be pleased for her imagine how upset she'd be if we weren't. Well there. But you reckon that well just look at all that missile Tom calling him say he was as holy I know you baby and pine cones and Magnolia only asked if you brought back all of this fool I told you I didn't want not look I know you we've got a plan well planned one that's going to use all this stuff and make you said no to money I mean got a clue what you're on a big 4 simple words the Grundy would have Christmas. Well there's a. Story of a thing Ok you look like you've seen a ghost he's just seeing Jim or is his performance really that frightening no oh them or I may have just put my foot in it somehow oh. We were chatting happily about which stories he's planning to read and how we'd like to present them. What I did was mention trying to get in some media attention and down came shot is that he was absolutely nothing to do with any publicist or something to do with remaining mysterious of us Jim for you I wouldn't waste your time trying to make sense of it would you mean I must have told you about being on the since Stevens art project committee with him well I know you have strong opinions strong opinions I've never met someone so obstreperous it was hard enough finding consensus as it was without him stirring the pot and then after all that he upped and left without the slightest explanation as right I remember now well it's funny I've always found him very dependable flaky that's the word he really thinks he may be fantastic then again he could leave you in the lurch look at this but he definitely needs careful handling when you obviously know better than I do not try to say that you wouldn't be able to come to our next meeting with you sorry I mean it really was quite odd the way he reacted and you are the one with experience of working with well I honestly don't think in fact we need a director to support seriously Russ I can't do it and you've got such a creative eye I'm sure you'd be brilliant Well that's very kind and maybe Jim just has an artistic temperament if he wants to be mysterious You could work on that with him maybe disguise him in some way discovered him I don't know him the one with the imagination Elizabeth I'm really not sure please or the last thing I need is for those stories to be another disaster with your talents though I'm sure it'll be an event to remember. Lord angle just hear a sound in just recent we can get that this Christmas tree decorations down table centerpieces I know Mum can make amends poison Christmas pudding I after all nice Before Well exactly so we know we can do it. The. Sight in the open easy put me we'll can arrange most of it yet we've got time on our hands and what you say would do everything look we've done before towards people for and treat our tombola reprises centers grotto our polling it's not rocket jam. Come on the kids who love it what you say his annoys OIG bad when you when I'm around Bush we've got a place. This year has already been all of us he Jesus of the pulling it would be so much a low food turn you know that we can all do together look forward to. We will Could we move 1st and then the Grundy world a Christian who says even want to celebrate Christmas as if it weren't for them Don is I'd like to forget about it altogether Hey come on I certainly don't want to be slapping a fake smile on me face so was all the folk another merry old toy following Don't be involved and we'll just take the money think you're listening to grim new world of Christmas is in the past I don't want any part of it all right. That. Was. And some are really is left feeling guilty and just in attempts to widen his net. Al Smith's award winning drama series set in an ambulance control room continues in half an hour and today a young boy has been stopped that's in lifelines at a quarter to 8 and then at 8 o'clock find on for Adrian Goldberg takes an in-depth look at the long running drug crisis at the very heart of Britain's health care service but now his front row with John Wilson hello we ask why Taylor Swift is in a tug of war with a private equity firm for the right to sing her own songs we've reviews of you exhibitions of work by 2 of America's most influential contemporary artists Nan golden and Judy Chicago and. Racing driver Sarah Moore is revving up to review new film Lamond 66 and that's the sound of a Ford g.t. Supercar by the way more coming up soon the bestselling children's novel wonder which sold 5000000 copies around the world told the story of a boy called or he Pullman who's born with a rare and severe facial disfigurement and whose bullet is school a heartbreaking and heartwarming tale it was adapted for a film starring Owen Wilson and Julia Roberts there have been several wonder spinoff stories written by its author. And the latest one takes readers back to a previous generation and another story about persecution Love Loss and kindness white bird starts with an American teenager called Julie and asking his grandmother about a family story set in Nazi occupied France. Is with me welcome to front row thank you and the teen in this new story is actually for those people who have read one. There is actually something he was occurred in your stories before he is the boy who bullies or in the original want to know why did you want to retrace his own story you know I thought it was really important for kids to understand that just because you make a mistake it doesn't make you a bad person and you know especially if you learn from that mistake and move forward and Julian does he has a very sort of complete narrative arc and so he seemed like the perfect person to tell this story we're talking to you in the in one day I think you trace you gave a hint of his own domestic problem just to explain why he was a bully but you go far deeper into the past yeah you know he is somebody who just didn't know how to deal with Auggie or his fears of August I think ultimately he was a little afraid of Auggie and he had 2 parents that were kind of clueless in being able to sort of help guide him through it so it's his grandmother who actually is able to reach him and she shares a story about herself that happened to her growing up as a young Jewish girl in occupied France and it's that story that finally is able to sort of you know connect with Julian he finally sees him self as the bully in someone else's story up until then I think you know we see himself as the victim of his own story so this is about a family displaced by war is about the Holocaust as well it's a very big and disturbing story told for your very young readers and one of the book's channel protagonists these is disabled he has polio and becomes a victim of the Nazis because of his disability so a similar story in a way about that person physical persecution this played out in a far more horrific way I guess because I and I wanted to explore that again the sense of what how people deal with differences and how tolerance ultimately is what we all strive for but I also really wanted to talk about kindness just like Wonder is a meditation on kindness you know among 5th graders and 6th graders in school this is more about kindness at a time when kindness were being kinder standing up for those people who can't stand up for. Elves could actually cost you everything including your life so I wanted to explore sort of the courage that it takes to be kind and it's $1.00 of those things that is explored in fighting white bird and that idea of kindness and I know you have an ongoing charity campaign about kindness but it's it's one of those things is explored in the book in the way in asking the question is it in 8 or can it be taught or should it be told it's funny because that I think is a question that's gone back centuries and certainly back to the Greek philosophers they've been you know is kindness a natural human component or is it not natural I'm one of the people that thinks that it's one of those things that we are inherently kind and invent you know as we grow older maybe we learn not to be it's a self defense mechanism I do think through storytelling and through other arts you can inspired children especially to be kind if you make them aware of the impact of their sort of their actions on other people I've noticed and certainly the popularity of wonder I think could really attest to the fact that children can be inspired they want to be kind so there's a philosophical aspect to this book and it's also tapping into why the concerns about society the most really a polemic elastic because without giving anything about away about the end of the book you bring it up to date and there are contemporary issues explored there which you are explicitly linking to those horrors of the past but you're saying look what's happening on the border of America you know it's ago absolutely because I was very very in fact the reason I wrote this book is because of everything that's going on in America right now I you know the Muslim ban and deportations and families being separated at the border and you know that the world scene that we we've we've gone through that before and I think we need to be really really attuned to the possibility of things like that happening again so I wanted to write this book as a way of sort of reintroducing this topic to younger children who might not actually have ever even heard about the Holocaust because you know it right now there was a recent survey just last year 2 thirds of. American millennial have never even heard of the word Auschwitz 22 percent of American millennia that's really disturbing so I mean there it is now that heart of the reason why I keep saying you've written this book and you've said that as well I think you have mentioned in the course of this conversation that if you. Let's come to that what it looks like at the now and it is really incredibly beautiful you started out as a graphic designer designing jackets for novels and what's happening here within this book are you drawing freehand all of these Can I am I actually did it all in a program called pro-create on the i Pad which was the 1st time I'd ever used a program it's great I use an Apple pencil and I drew the entire thing I colored it then brought it into Photoshop to add some light textures and things like that but the whole thing was drawn on the i Pad It was fantastic I loved it what you saw it 1st graphic novel is my 1st graphic novel and probably my last graphic novel that there was a lot of work I did not realize how much work would go into it but did you think this story in particular the historical aspect lent itself to that form better than sitting down and writing as a as a light wonder as a children you know I thought that it was for some reason it just presented itself to me as a very almost like a movie inside my head I just kind of knew how it would look and and what the characters would look like and I wanted to I really thought that I would be able to do it faster if I did it is a graphic novel so I read some Brown's lovely autumnal tones I've just realized leafing through as you know they aren't they're very sepia toned I try to get a very historic kind of. Thing oh yeah exactly well cause it takes most of it takes place in $194940.00 s. You know and so it was it was a labor of love and I you know I'm really proud of it but having said that I probably won't do another graphic novel at least in the near future is a lot of work. So much work well done it really is a very beautiful and very moving book I appreciate that thank you so much thank you very much indeed thank you for coming out and that book. Talking about white bird is out now Taylor Swift is one of the most successful singer songwriters of modern times so why was she told she wasn't allowed to sing these songs. His baby now we get there you know we just said that. 3 of Taylor Swift's biggest hits love story shake it off and bad blood of course songs that she wrote herself and that have been performed by her many times over the years in recent days there Taylor Swift has taken to social media to door attention to a legal dispute that she claimed had prevented her from singing her own songs at the forthcoming American music awards show which is to be staged this Sunday it's a case about ownership of music after publishing rights are bought and sold copyright lawyer Duncan Lamont is here to explain what is going on doesn't Duncan what has happened in the last few days or if you would be surprised if you hit it on the head when you said the Private Equity 5 it Finance was involved in rock and roll and Country and Western but that's the the modern world in which we live and she wrote these songs. She entered into a deal for 6 albums she completed that she stood by her contract and she was actually quite keen to buy back her material but she was trumped by private equity and a team of people including Scooter Braun and Scott prophetic who ask you to brother for former manager That's right who also incredibly creative incredibly rich and see the value of these 6 amazing albums and she can perform them that's a slight misnomer to get there the traction for all of this because that's a performing right that she's got but it's the rerecording of them and then the putting them online so there's spewed was about all the claim was that if she was seen them at the A.M.A.'s on Sunday that in effect even though it's a live performance anybody could do that but the fact that that show is recorded constitutes a new recording of those songs and that's. They were taking issue with well not the actual show itself because she could perform that and they made quite clear again because they read the contract and she should read the contract that wasn't what it was about but of course Actually it's afterwards when you the member of the public they love what they're saying they can download it and they can of course advertising and payments for that and that's many many more people do that look at it afterwards and look at it on Sunday evening so there's a real revenue stream there that the private equity does not want to easily give up and so that had to be a conversation about that has it been resolved now that well we'll wait and see if it's been completely resolved they're now talking in a way that they didn't seem to be talking just a couple days ago is that because Taylor Swift to shame them on social media she's very good at this we have to say she led a campaign with Spotify and a lot of the streaming services and she was saying that artists and simply not getting their dues they're getting such a tiny percentage of revenue from the streaming money which is pouring through she's doing the same thing now in terms of the copyright and the what is it that the publishing rights to the songs is in the lab and she did that twice as you know both with Spotify and then with Amazon and Apple on behalf of self and other artists you know she's very much at forefront I mean looking behind this without wishing to onto the glue stick about it but we have some very sharp minds looking to the future both the private equity who can see the amazing performances as a teenager that she's put together and that that could last 100 years but also her wanting to recapture what she has created but sold and that is the nature of the world people put money in but your father actually benefited from her success but they would say look at all the people who don't succeed and we've put money into their charisma into nothing is a complicated one we sort of went through it with with George the late George Michael and yes the ninety's trying to get out of that record deal Stone Roses happen with them as well and various cases how significant will this one be. I think it shows the new landscape both in terms of obviously the availability online of making lots of money as we know performing as book. Much more valuable than the records and I think in 5 years time I think everything she does is 5 years ahead of its time both in terms of she was at the forefront of me 256 years ago you mentioned that she was the forefront of support for and I think will say she has changed things but it's going to take a while for actor trickle through and trickle all over the world and you're referring to the sharpest minds in private equity a moment ago I think we know who the shop is mined in this story is Taylor Swift. Thanks very much to Duncan Lamont in 1906 a battle between the USA and Italy raged in northwest France one that was for behind the steering wheels of supercars created by Ford and Ferrari the racing rivalry between the 2 car companies is explored in new feature film Lamond $66.00 which dramatized of the year in which Ford reclaimed the crown with the 1st of 4 straight wins at the famous 24 hour injurious race the rivalry on the track was sparked by a personal one between Henry Ford Jr and Italian car King and Ferrari Enzo Ferrari will go down in history as the greatest army searcher of all time why. Is it because he built the most cars. It's because of what his tires me. He wins that Lamar people take they watch some of that. For. A scene from the man 66 the film in which Christian Bale is in this Bourne drive a can miles and Matt Damon stars as Carroll Shelby the car designer who created a winning machine for Henry Ford the 2nd he wants to shake off the company's dowdy image Sarah Moore is a racing driver who won the Brit car insurance championship last year she's in our York studios sorry you're a young racing driver this is a true story one worth telling. Yeah definitely I mean it was interesting for me because obviously I'm still young so they were way before my times there were yeah it was an interesting watch Were you aware of that rivalry I mean are you the sort of driver that studies racing history. I'm not too much of a geek. And therefore g.t. 40 has always been one of my favorite cars so yeah it was definitely for me a film I had to watch so this is a film very much about rivalry it's about developing that car that will allow Ford to Chalo channel challenge Ferrari who were dominant in racing for so long what was so special about the g.t. 40. I think for Ford you know the hardest thing for them with was to you were obviously be the Ferrari but I think the key thing about that car to start off with was the speed of it in a straight line and the thing that they had to work on was was actually getting the car through the corners and they knew if they mastered that then they would have the fastest car there have you ever driven one I've never I've driven a few replicas but never the real thing yet but the film very much puts the viewer in the driving seat this is a real visceral experience you know gripping the side of the cinema seat. A familiar view for you a very familiar view you know you are that is this is what you see for your job did it capture the experience the thrill of racing and see it it's in some aspects. Of the sound there but I think unless you actually driving the car itself I don't think you're ever going to get that feeling. Because to actually drive a race car especially something like that it's always feel the more you can feel you know the car underneath you as to how fast you know you feel comfortable going through the corners and being able to push out of its comfort zone say you never feel 100 percent what it's like to be not driving see but you you get a rough idea through you know the noise and and its highest and tell us something about Lamont itself I mean it is a legendary race is. Bingo for nearly 100 years now another motor racing fan Steve McQueen made that love letter to the man in $170.00 I think does does this film capture the romance of the event it does for me air I mean look enough that my older brother's actually completed there 3 times so I've been nowhere in recent years to see it but it was nice to actually see you know how it all started out really in a back in the sixty's when they used to actually run across the track to the cast to start the race which unfortunately they can't do anymore for them it was last year you have to be a petrol head to enjoy this funny thing and I wouldn't say so it's not although it is you know people see as a car film it's not all based on cars you know it's the engineering side of it and also in involves that you know the families that come along with the race and you know it takes a loss apart from from the families as you know Well exactly exactly thanks very much Sarah discussing Limone $66.00 which is in cinemas now certificate 12 a the next 4 weeks a make or break time for many in publishing as they hit the busiest and most important month of the year the all important Christmas market of course all this week we're focusing on different aspects of the publishing industry with 2 seasoned insiders Claire Alexander is a literary agent and former publisher and John mentioned is a former marketing director of Waterstones and co-founder of unbound the crowdfunding publishers tonight the focus is on the online retailer Amazon which dispatched its 1st book in 1905 I mean it is the single biggest most profound change in the industry in the past 20 years I mean Amazon are now I think overall the 5th or possibly even the 4th largest retailer in the u.k. They're easily the biggest retailer of books getting close to 50 percent I think of books and near 85 percent of e-books and even a bigger percentage of audio books so they are amassed. If player so any discussion about the publishing industry has to be done with Amazon firmly kind of at the front what Amazon want to do or Amazon experiment with when I was in make technological innovations like Kindle these things affect everybody you can't overstate its importance nor can you overstate perhaps the that the threat that this poses to the traditional industry to publishers in particular because Amazon agree expanding across all their product ranges books are now less than 8 percent in the u.k. Of total sales and yet for most publishers it's kind of approaching 50 percent or over so that they are holding a tremendous amount of power and some people would say they abuse that power it's it's arguable both ways but what you cannot ever argue is that Amazon aren't massively important and will be continued to be massively important possibly more important as the future of books on falls mostly they're extremely helpful to sales that said there are things Amazon can do and there are ways in which they want to eat other people's cake one of the things they can do interesting Lee is make a bestseller what they can do is amplify something but that something has to start somewhere else so if a book starts to sell if a book starts to be talked about the Amazon algorithm will pick up on that and amplify it they can't start the ball rolling if you ever buy a book some of the recommendations will feel very old because they'll just be the book that selling a lot and therefore it will come up no matter what but they also want a bit of everybody else's cake and that is a bit frightening an example of that is all double So Amazon having launched Kindle which was a game changer if not as big a game changer as was expected and big players in the audio area with audible which they own and ordered will is almost like poetry laudable but there are issues. And there's one that's quite amusing but also quite dangerous that's going on currently in America where audible thought that what they'd like to add to the experience of listening to audio was what they called captions well that meant was you could read along while you listened but their argument was that that wasn't the book its words but the words of the words that you're hearing rather than the words that the author was writing and consequently they weren't going to pay publishers or authors or indeed even acquire the rights to do that so that's where it all gets very very fussy and really quite dangerous I mean there are always troubling things around us into that you have to some of them maybe take with a pinch of salt I know that the technology exists for them to see how far in to any any book that you have read and one of the suggestions is that the some point the discount will be based on how far through a book a reader has read so further eating into the money that publishers and authors make there's no evidence that they've done that but it is terrifying when a company has as much information and we should say about Amazon the reason it is so big is that it works you know they are the biggest and most efficient logistics company on earth however as close as there are many things that they can't they're not good at added value people don't go on to Amazon for the crack and to feel that they're part of a community of like minded readers or or for any kind of connection with the authors they go in to buy the things they want and they usually get out just as quickly as they can I think one of the unexpected bonuses of the book Revolution is that physical books are a lot more beautiful than they were you know it was more time effort and energy spent on typesetting and on the covers of the books than there was say 20 years ago and I think that has been a genuine change so you know going into bookshops now the front tables of pushups fiction and nonfiction there is an amazing kind of cornucopia of. Beautiful design to look at I think that one of the great forces for publishers getting bigger and bigger is their idea that somehow they're going to get big enough that when they're in a room with Amazon Amazon is going to take them seriously of course they never can get big enough and Amazon also continue to look for new ways on the technological side that's very exciting but as with that old bull story they will all say create things that look remarkably like the original book to me but they won't want to pay for them so you know we all have to be very alert that their technological breakthroughs don't actually breakthrough into killing something that was the mothership clear Alexander and John mentions Cern tomorrow they'll be considering where the power lies in publishing and no it's not just Amazon 2 of the most influential American women artists of modern times both of whom have explored deeply personal and political issues throughout their careers have just opened major new exhibitions artist photographer Nan Goldin is known for her candid images of friends and family in bars bedrooms and bathrooms She recently hit the headlines of course for leading the campaign to stop sponsorship of museums and galleries by Sackler the big pharma company whose drug Oxycontin is linked to the opioid epidemic in the states won gold in herself spent years addicted to the drug Judy she can go as a pioneering feminist artist who for the last 5 decades or so has been using images of women's bodies to highlight her recurring themes of sex birth and death she has a major retrospective at the Baltic in Gateshead Emily steer editor of elephant magazine has seen both shows and is with me. Emily let's start with Nan Goldin old and new work gather together at the Mary Goodman Gallery in London let's start with the films which are the new aspect to the work which seemed to be direct responses to her own personal struggles with drug addiction yes so memory loss to riches was made this year certainly as it said the. Edgehill slideshow of still images that she's taken and Super 8 1st pitch is incredibly emotional as a pace there's an original soundtrack that goes over it as well and is footage of friends who she's known over the years going back to the 1970 s. And it really tackles the subject of addiction and the very painful side of it and then there's another video called sirens which looks much more at the kind of euphoric sights of being high as well yes so so you really go through that journey it's interesting as we saw in so much of the early work we saw her friends many of whom were drug addicts but then there's a different kind of drug addiction which is now being explored and what do you see this crossover between the work in the galleries and the protest against the gallery's that she staging against Yeah and I think a lot of that is the sort of contradictions I guess of addiction as well where for the person at the time there are incredible highs and lows throughout the video throughout memory last there are voicemail messages that people have left there are people talking about their experience of addiction and even as the viewer you experience that euphoria as well so I think she she really takes you on that very personally John I think there's always a contradiction as a kind of strange thing that happens in there and Golding's photographs because so many of the themes of the situations are pretty squalid and yet there's a beauty and that's a lot to do with the way she's shooting she shoots on film and there's a lovely saturated color and then these images we see in the gallery the photographs in those light boxes so beautifully lit I think it's also the fact that she has being part of those communities as well because she's going in as an artist not so as a tourist taking photos of people but really as part of that world so I think is the viewer you might see them as college but I think as her there is a great amount of love in that you have you know a real kind of connection with these people so it does I doubt this very complete wild and. Yeah the lighting in the exhibition is incredible they they're not actually like boxes that are not from the front yard so they're actually photographs but they do seem to go. And then also upset as she has a collection of images of the sky that she took when she came out of rehab in the eighty's and again you've got this natural light coming in through the ceiling of the gallery and it really creates this sort of Heaven like experience and she's compared the downstairs as being like purgatory in the Alps as being like heaven where you're sort of in the party and you're in the pain as well downstairs and then you come up to this very calm quiet serene room. That is quite a shock to experience just to come back to those photographs another thing that struck me today looking round was and his being there in the work you know throughout the ninety's eighty's and ninety's and certainly those people at the bars and at the parties you know the trend gender. Portrayed that in a way which we now kind of take for granted which switch we'd see a lot and she's a kind of ahead of her time she was a trail blazer that yeah and I think her photography has definitely allowed those communities to be seen in a different way by a very broad audience as well as a series of works that she took in Boston in the seventy's which were all of you know people who she was hanging out with who were very ostracised as well and perhaps even by the gay community where they really didn't feel that they had a place and she has been able to champion these people and to to bring a sensitivity to their experience just realize I promise to double review we were going to. Have a word about her showing at the bowl Take this is a 50 year career now a very personal work Also how would you characterize who are. Powerful I think again ahead of its time in pioneering she has really addressed feminism and the environment in an incredibly punchy way but I think when you say it's all. Together you know she's very interested in the human experience and what she has tried to do is show the human and the animal experience as well as being universal experience so it's shifting a male dominated view which can end up feeling like you when you look at lots of artists and to really show topics such as birth environmental damage death you know it's something that everybody experiences and she's one of I know that yeah and hugely influential now yes yeah I mean you know that the dinner party is kind of one of her best now sadly not so the blogs like it's in yes it's in Brooklyn if you want to go and see that thanks very much I'm really talking about the Judy Chicago retrospective which is at the Baltic in Gateshead runs to April next year and Mangold in is at the Marian Goodman Gallery in London until January tomorrow we speak to it in the men's all the voice of Elser and frozen Of course as the sequel is released in cinemas clearly Disney didn't want to let it go after all curses here tomorrow 715. Front row was presented by our John Burleson and produced by Robbins on this week's file on for the devastating drug shortages affecting thousands of patients with debilitating conditions like epilepsy the men a pause heart problems even cancer the n.h.s. Is having to ration some treatments and we've been told that people are dying because the medicines they need aren't available we'll hear from patients whose health has been threatened and from professionals on the front line of acute care who would make shortages mean they sometimes can't offer seriously ill patients the best treatment that's fallen for tonight at 8. Down ready for our drama Susan rich we go behind the scenes in an ambulance control room as Carrie deals with heartbreaking calls from members of the public this is Lifeline's by meth. Ambulance Service is the patient breathing conscious. So a. Question to ask do you have an emergency center. At your school Ok I'll return and research so you thought you know I'm for some research here but I'm not a culture of. Thought I'm sorry Potter people around and when is the job interview . Assumed she wanted to question I think Russia put me on the spot here on live like I want to write chairman only after she won collection the wheelchair was a much hotter Well what would you do try to show them and how would you do that probably crushed. Down on you don't I 99 in an emergency probably good thank you yeah sounds that you got around so. What's your name a muffin top. Cow is that. And which goes to is that interfaith rule good managers foundation trust and you job interviews today said our project. Well when you ring off I'll get them on who would really cool us let them know just how far you've been today thank you I want casual and clearly have any advice for me don't own 199 unless you have an emergency that's always a good one thank you I'm not sure there's a Black thank you I'll let you know no need. Good afternoon hours are help and I've just tried to close some flights but my card was rejected so I just go to the account and there's some stuff there I don't understand why you don't have the account holder Yes Question Name trace carry peaches. 18th of June 85 I'm just going to have to ask you some security questions can you give me the credit of your password. And I. And can you give me the exact amount of your regular mortgage payment is $850.00 pounds. Thank you so much transaction you're sharing too well there's a few there's a little payments 5 pounds 8 pounds 3 pounds yesterday all the same international transaction but I don't think they're from us and you don't reckon I stop paying No I mean I don't know if I've been hacked I say it's a joint account yes with my the ha and have you asked them not yet I don't mean those to be him I mean I don't know what it is but it's a betting website what Chris same small payments were looking at there or to a betting website and online casino. Be sure yes I mean I can check with a whole team to see what that legitimate given etc into account you might want to check with the other account holder fast. Ok Anything else I can help you know and I thanks Ok Africa RINGBACK RINGBACK. Her initially for trial 40 years off from a corner of her squad larger. Story because. To you break ground or there is a. Yes one so very. Ambulance Service is the patient or even consciousness this is the ambulance service what's your emergency measure starts again I'm going to know what's your address please hard to tell is course in a back to school here and he's bleeding you know is he breathing in conscious he or is he awake yet so I know there's an ambulance already on its way every how much blood would you say he's most. Trying to help here of health care suffering how much blood has he lost I don't know nose so everywhere you know more where was he stabbed just a little or just a little bit like that or white blood splatter no home no longer. Hymns available this is a bad stepping yes available consider it was your name place Director Darren is it just the once he's been stabbed you don't I want you to press down on the wound and do your best to stop the bleeding or should I use your hands if you need to you need to try and stop him bleeding Have you got anything you can tie around his leg you know what about the go kill I just had a girl's voice Oh yeah my girlfriend is just going to get some out of court though much him back great take it out wrap it around his leg above the wound and tie as tightly as you can oh what's the patient's name how old is he 16 encourage him to stay awake Yes stay away plan. I'm just going to put the phone down you can bet me as speaker if you named. Ok I've got a bow tie around his leg above the wound as tightly as you can. Learn there's so much blood. All still kill me trying to help you stay awake and is available and in coming can you get exact location place where you are exactly please Darren. Behind the tennis court and the fight shifts. Doesn't mean we're all just behind me to most the roads north side just east of the 1st building on left as you enter Sports Club received from the satellite looks like this clearance to land on the tennis court for lying police also on route hall still waiting. Homes in 5 cars Tell me exactly what's happening Darren stop playing body I was going to say Ok Darren I want you to follow my instructions very carefully Ok Ok row your friend onto his back. If you're on his back here Ok now your friends heart may have stopped beating so I need you to pump it for him I need you to nail by his side lean over him and put the heel of your right hand in the middle of his chest over his breast bone and then need you to take your other hand place it on top and into look your fingers Ok now with both arms straight and your weight above his chest I need you to compress his chest down to depths of 2 inches in the following rhythm one and 2 and 3 and 4 and one and 2 and 3 and 4 do it for me now. To say it loudly and clearly on every compression plays I want to hear you say it with me one and 2 and 3 and 4 and one and 2 and 3 and 4 well. Darren. Just sounded. Darren Darren. Darren I need you to carry on doing chest compressions she's given me well I need you to ask her to move aside so that you can continue doing c.p.r. On your sled I have to louder. Insist Darren. Insists Darren move her if you have to persuade us to. Let me talk to her. Show us your choice. I'm rich All right. I understand that if your son doesn't receive c.p.r. Right now he's going to die please let Darren carry on Ok All right. 123 full. Screen. There is an ambulance on its way as well as a helicopter. Can you tell me don't really. Say again. He still played a little I thought you said that stops him but every time a person should just keep doing c.p.r. . If you want to was one of the others to double to 20 k. You can but you must carry on I want to hey you 23 full 23 full gray Chevy Cobalt 000-000-0000 extension 0 m. He said let's go back. To the free before we need to tell you stop it needed you to move back here. Take your show you don't have thank you Gracie I got a you counting down and give it. To for you. This. Question this. Tissue on I hold you know you thought. If you do they keep. Going through all coal mines that my boy was telling police that you're right I will keep doing c.p.r. Damn And don't start 3 of 4 helicopters to our cars police on Roscoe news you're lying this to the base you know those are going to happen like this I swear right now it doesn't matter what happened to her and just keep the chest compressions going. He cried as if she could hear the voice. Go on Shall I say you live. As you can which was critical. Really so I'm saying. If. So I saw the future for psycho should be off. To shred to be awarded. She was sliding off Gracie so it's no use to have to it was just meant to be a warning to solo waltz. Other folks or you guys part your back also she should. Be alright I don't know diary part of the farm you know our. Story. Did ask how they were. Doing this and back. I think they said 16. Just kids yeah. How do you. Do you mind if I take this. Hi Yeah. Yeah what's up. I called the bank and you're going to the from except the payment didn't go very high the bank says this benighted transactions on a betting website. Is that you. So . That nothing that's like this cool you off it. Just to me is a couple of 100 quid this month who together by the looks of it. Well mostly doing that it's just about how to get more money home to movements from the joint it can be right but. It's my money you have been paid this month and all all we need that money to get flying we still get a product you haven't got enough money can come welcome like your old one off inside. What's going on here and I think. You want a woman get a pictorial you don't think spending 300 quid we don't have a gambling website something I should be How about. Explaining why do you have an issue it only took 50. That you just took me. I've got another one here that suit yourself up before I get one I need to take some responsibility for this and I'm pretty pissed off until see I took up the. Ambulance Service is the patient breathing in conscious thought I made so many rush rush doctors come out of the interview. Didn't go as planned always like that you have now really I wash my hands so any. Time you wash them charges are what I wanted to ram and such so it had let them know what that meant best appreciate our of everything without help this is an emergency number Martin I know all. About all found it very easy to make the right decisions I'm really mix or way I'm sorry to hear that Martin but I do need to keep the line clear for emergencies . But if you do should be with I'm going to go to it though the best most here thank you if you haven't got me thinking about you not that I'm aware of but you know even a down the line knocks on don't blame. Is the patient conscious. I like to question and push what poetry can be made in the performance the hard the u.k. Spoken might seem not a great space for poetry but we're not the only space we're pretty happy working where doesn't just have to be standing in front of a microphone of an audience we've made our instructions in our own spaces a lot of us are actually from the past not is what wasn't I make sure that it's there for the new generation beginning with damning him striding community over me poet if you want to bury him I would not be a poet powerlines on b.b.c. Radio 4 with me an aerosol done on a Sunday afternoon for the. B.b.c. News at 8 o'clock a leaked report has said that failings at the show's brilliant Telford any Chess Trust have not been properly addressed the reviews ordered by the government in 2017 says there was a toxic culture in which babies were left with brain damage and the concerns of parents were frequently dismissed Standard Chartered Bank has announced it will not renew its sponsorship of Prince Andrew's charity pictured Palace he's been under pressure since a b.b.c. Interview in which he said he did not regret his association with the convicted sex offender Geoffrey Epstein the former Lord Chancellor Lord Falconer has urged that youth to withdraw from public duties until the matter has been resolved. The U.K.'s 1st general election television debate between the 2 contenders most likely to become prime minister is getting underway Jeremy carbon and Boris Johnson are appearing before an i.t.v. Studio audience and suffered the Liberal Democrat leader Jo Swinson claim that viewers would have expected to see her included I think they're scared that if people see that there's a genuine alternative a little hands off that they will turn around and they will look at Boris Johnson and Jeremy Corbin and they will say this is not good enough there's going to be a lot of people watching tonight you see that today and feel depressed and I'm saying look you have a choice there is an alternative a senior Facebook executive has told the b.b.c. There has been no foreign interference on Facebook Instagram or what's up in the elections so far Steve Hatch who's Facebook's vice president for Northern Europe said the company would work constructively with any future British government even if it introduced a so-called tech tax police say they're mystified by the appearance of bundles of cash on the streets on a former pit village in County Durham says 2014 villagers in black coal colliery have found 13 bundles each of 2000 pounds and handed the men to take to Constable John Foster says no.