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Oh than 30 right now what a great group of people in Saudi Arabia we will know very soon we have tremendously talented people that do this stuff very well they're coming back tonight tomorrow and I will not very soon have I am not satisfied with what I've heard an inquest has heard as a New Castle university student died after he took part in an initiation style pub crawl 20 year old ad farmer died in hospital in December 26th saying cheering the hearing as a March that are drawing to 100 triple Volt is have been ordered in one bar the inquest is continuing. The number of patients with infections in their bloodstream that are resistant to antibiotics has increased by more than a 3rd in England there were more than 16 and a half 1000 cases in 2017 compared with around 12250 in 213 Dr Susan Hopkins is Deputy Director of Public Health England all of these people are required mission hospitals to treat them using the end result of action that's not in trees or properly sepsis or severe bloodstream and actually we know that there is still more than 30000000 prescriptions given out in England every year and what we want to do here is to give you the understands that when they go into the G.P. They don't expect someone to take their doctor's advice and scientists have discovered a plastics in human perky for the 1st time a small world wide study find up to 9 different plastics in the samples of everyone who took part taking a look at the sport here and they asked a midfielder Mesut Ozil turned on the style as they came from behind the beat last a 31 of the Emirates and recorded 10th successive victory for the 1st time since 2007 the German equalized for the gun as before bringing in table part of Pierre Emerick about Young's brace in the 2nd half they win season I am resigned we have to 4th in the Premier League table Kristie are out Oh says his lawyers a confident on the truth is always coming as he answered questions of the event as champions league news conference about rape allegations against him Catherine my organs alleged rape her at a Las Vegas hotel in 2009 he denies the accusations J. Marino says he's happy a Manchester United or want to see out his contract at the club that's after being linked with a return to reanimate Dritte contract runs until 2020 Pep Guardiola has again claim Manchester City do not have the feel of Champions League winners and urged supporters to propel the club forward 7th hearing a bar have been drawn at home to league want to A.F.C. Wimbledon in the. The 1st round of the F.A. Cup You can see the full draw on the B.B.C. Sport website and wouldn't champion Angele Kerber was beaten in 3 sets by Kiki Burton's up a finals in Singapore Sloane Stephens beat the US Open champion Miami a sock D.V.C. Size line full this week on sideline looking at the grey areas around relationships in a most unlikely place is it OK to go for a drink we'll boss how far can you go in peace and someone to come to the scene people that lack look at your social media is your own fault for not locking it down a cause that we feel he was placed on as a luxury to help shows he's in the right and he's in the long gray areas for all this week on B.B.C. Radio 5 Live. On AM and F.M. Are in the U.K. On digital and online I'm Rod sharp we're off all night my heart's in the Highlands as I may have mentioned before and so too are increasingly a large number of other people's including a panel of experts of the child will guide Lonely Planet This is undoubtedly good news if you're a tourism director and your reports are expected to reflect an ever upward trend in the number of visitors on the other hand the whole point about the Highlands as a norm of a whole lot of people live imagine of everywhere where light the road up the side of luck alone and enough with the count of a watch the Highlands and Islands so no and Lonely Planet's best and travel top 10 for 2019 we'll. It started as a promise every day of his presidency Barack Obama would read 10 of the letters received at the White House some of them he even. Pen a personal reply to and he did here's one Dear President elect Obama my name is Benjamin Jarrett I mean 18 years old this was my 1st time voting and let me tell you it was not a fun experience I thought with my father of this election so much that I didn't get my doubt filled out to the morning of the election it was not until that night when the Democrats had a chance to get 60 chairs that I saw some of the things my father was talking about he showed me how the Democratic Party now has majority of all the branches of government he even went so far as to say that we may not have an election in 2012 after he had finished his rant he looked at me and said I pray that you are right and I am. Voting for you in this election was truly the 1st time I had done something that went against my father I feel that this has been a big step in becoming the person I meant to become I truly believe that you are the man who can make this place we all call home the great want to get if we are doomed to collapse then so be it I will look like a fool along with all my friends and my father will tell me it's OK and then I never could have predicted this I don't know what you have to do to fix this place we live in I don't even know if you can all I ask is that you give it everything you have if you do that I will know that I made the right choice sincerely Benjamin Derrick Jeanne Marie Laskas reading from a to Obama the book she's compiled of letters to the 44th president of the which he calls my single favorite story about my presidency that's not a bad thing to get on your blower as it so hard to Jeanne Marie Laskas Did you ever get access to such a true of. Well it was really quite a surprising experience all around and this was right at the end of Obama's 2nd term of office in 2016 and you know the place was packing up everyone was heading out the door and I learned that the president had been reading 10 letters a day for all 8 years of his presidency and I simply asked for a visit to the mail room and they let me in and I saw all that mail. And I said my goodness I want to read that man and I started reading it and raise it great experience why didn't they make this more of a sort of a political party I mean surely there are some political capital to be raised from the fact that your president is so responsive you know you kind of would think they would have they could have like made a deal out of it and turned it into a you know can now especially in America here we are you know make a show out of it. But they didn't it because I think I mean it wasn't a secret but they didn't sort of blast it and I think because it genuinely was Obama's thing I mean it was a private thing he did at the end of each day read the mantle and it wasn't something that President Bush did was before him. Well you know every president had some relationship with constituent now but nothing like this not this kind of like promise that I would make a part of each and every one of my days that was a uniquely Obama thing. And then the question obviously occurs why did he do it and you did have a chance to ask about didn't you have a pretty clear that he had good reason for doing this you know I talked to him I talked to him a few times about it actually I had a chance to once while he was still in office before he left and then about a year after and just asked that very question you know what why did you do this what was this about and he talked a lot about you know 1st maybe maybe it seems obvious but you know that once you're in the White House you're in a bubble and you lose contact with you know the voters and the constituents and the people that you were have pledged to serve you really you don't really know what's going on you only read polls and and read to filtered version that it that your senior staff is bringing to you and he wanted the he wanted the truth you know he wanted the unfiltered version and the mail was just a mechanism from from his perspective of and that was a way that he had some access and it was it was unfiltered and these were just hand selected by a team of staffers not you know not policy people you know trying to make a point so I mean how many letters a day were coming in to the mail room during the the Obama presidency it averaged 10000 a day or so was a big squad the they had actually read in the mall and then they read the mail they read everything it was a huge squad it was a. Team of about 50 staffers and then I don't know how many in turns that was a rotating crew then turns and then about 300 volunteers rotating in and out it was quite an operation reading the mail one of the things I think I got from the book was people who don't really ask to go to the mailroom sometimes that would be something that they would really enjoy doing Yeah well that's the thing it started to be in oh this was President Obama wanted to get 10 letters a day but ended up happening is the senior staff and the folks over in the West Wing became to want to know what was going on in the mail to you know they didn't that letter because like a source and so it became. The divorces were actually elevated because the president won and then others people want to start started to want them as well and all letters are sky so they ended up virtually on a distribution list and lots of people were saying the speechwriters were seeing them yes and fact often. Obama would give them to the speechwriters and say here please work this letter into something this is exactly what it is we've been talking about here's someone with this same story but you know this is a the textured version filled with emotion and plot and everything so he would sometimes filter through but all so yes this these letters would go out on this distribution list of people would could pull from them and use them for all kinds of you know. It's just use them as research. Let's go by the one of these island throws again and the this one is from somebody called 1000000000 groom in Oxford Missouri and I'll just give you a page number which is 23 what was so special about Bobby and grooms leftover from Oxford Missouri Why did they all talk about it now it really is a favorite and it's one of my favorites as well you know hearing and I have this guy in Oxford Mississippi who was just a guy out of work out of work for 2 years as it happened when he finally sat down to write this letter and he writes in to tell of this experience and the way that he renders the experiences by looking at his hands that no longer have calluses on them you know he was a working man he was a lancer mayor and he was missing in his old hands and so he was reticent to can you could you read it for us I would love to yeah this is a beautiful letter it starts Mr Obama my president in 2007 I was proud of my hands they had veneered calluses were my palms touch my fingers cuts and scrapes were never severe splinters and blisters merely annoyed me with a vice like grip and a dextrous touch my hands were he tolerant and cold ignorant I was nimble When willing or when sharpening an axe I could expose the 8 with an open palm when my weights back it just or my arched for a RUB MY Now as for usually stained after a chore they were tough or not cracked so the manicured my hands to find my work passions my life. After 23 years as a lancer there and here are 2 years unemployed I miss my career and my old hands and unite and clutch new hands together and we may all recover what seems lost May God guide your hands to mold our future thank you for listening to the citizen I am Bobby Ingram. I put citizen Lim in capitals doesn't he or capital C. Anyway rather like every man it's as if he is he is the American talking to the American president and honestly I I spoke with him and every single letter he. Printed on this it was a handwritten one had a meaning like that there was a reason he had the capital C. That was to me every one just that the whole letter he wrote he worked on for months just like a poem or like a prayer really did he expect to get a reply from the president he certainly did not nor did anyone in fact almost everyone I talk to have the same it's the same thought like well I know he's never going to read this but this is just something I need to do and so they would be then all of a sudden some of them would get a response from the Obama in the mail and they would be just shocked and what happened to both of you that did the letter make a difference to his life or was just a way of venting him getting over the fact that you know the recession had taken its toll on him too I think for him you know it wasn't getting a letter back from Obama that changed his life I mean that was sort of like just miraculous and like sort of 6 deranged dream but for him getting that letter written and getting it out and send it in it. For him is sort of a mark to the end of his grieving it was just like he was going to now stop he was going to do whatever he could with his life that wasn't going to be about just mourning his old life he was going to start a new one and for him the writing the letter was kind of like a passage of time anybody I think who's ever seen the the Oval Office knows that there's a gate keeper. Who like it keeper is terribly important who is Obama's gate keeper well for him there are many gatekeepers but the gate keeper between him and the man was a woman named Fiona Reeves and she was the one who was in charge of picking which 10 letters he would read each day and that is you know going through the you know not that she had to read all $10000.00 but that she was in charge of all 10000 every day and wiggling them down to 10 and they would get passed up to her and in some kind of a short list they would get past her and a short list list of about 2 to $300.00 that the rest of the bat had called through and decided were you know sort of like should be in the running and she would take those and get those down to 10 and then she would put them in a very specific order the order she thought the president should read them in you know should he have a funny one 1st or a funny one at the end and winding ones in the middle or what should he have. What about the topics because they're all organized by topics run things. Well she didn't organize them by bike topics unless America was writing by topic so for example just she's trying to render Americas nude at any given day so if most of the male one day is all health care reform she might do a whole 10 just about health care although that would be an unusual day but more than that it would be like OK this is a repeated voice we keep getting people are complaining about. You know maybe you did don't ask don't tell policy in the in the military a lot of complaints about that we need to you know we need to get rid of that we need to get rid of that and so she would put a bunch of those in you know but it really was just like what she was hearing how can she get best deliver it to him and somebody even wrote about the plight of the beads there was that there was even a B. Section in the in the mail room apparently there was a they had a they had a big wall and they would sort of like file them by category and there was one about there's all kinds of like categories you just couldn't even imagine needed to be one. A few of us background was one that took a close to the president before he was president right she was on the campaign Yeah and you know I heard that a lot a lot of the folks who dealt with the mail had started either on the campaign or shortly after it and came in as internes who wanted to be on the campaign followed him very closely and you know was one who had been knocking on doors door to door. A lot of the letters in fact I think all I thought you know have of one thing in common which is that it's important it's important for the writer to write to the president and they all of a kind of confidence don't there's very little actual cynicism whichever view they take whether they approve of something he's done or disapprove you know this is such an interesting point that I hear only when I'm talking to people outside of the U.S. a Remark let's And it must be something that is unique to this country where people have the kind of the confidence or exactly confidence but. They they deserve they're a citizen and they deserve to be part of this conversation no matter how small they are in the scheme of things they feel they have a voice and that's what I mean that's what Obama was encouraging you know like participation in your government pretty in your democracy so in a way in a way that's that's like a lovely thing to notice that we do want to participate and in our democracy here no matter what we think of it quite a lot of them actually and you are my last chance or you're my last hope you know I've tried everything else and they believe that. Oh yeah that was a common. Such a common cry you know I have nowhere else to turn and so I'm writing to you Mr President and you know these are the moments of desperation people in real heartache a moments of you know a child a son or daughter just died or it's a side or you know. Just these just these terrible moments and people having no place then maybe they had plenty of places to turn in their actual lives but also felt they wanted to tell the president I found that remarkable. And a lot of them have really had oing stories to tell about their experiences with American health care don't they and nearly all of them have to talk about how much has cost them so many especially in the earliest days when Obama was 1st sort of getting in people who are sending they were sending in their health care bills they were just like look at this what what are we supposed to do you know my my son would have died without this operation and now what do I do in here is living proof you know that the bill. There was a lot and this staff would say to me you know you could look at all the charts and graphs about how this was like politically not a. Maybe maybe not a good idea for him to get. For him to be pursuing this health this American. The A C. a Health care act of all Care Act Thank you for a look at you know maybe maybe he shouldn't have been. Politically in the in pursuing this but when you get enough of these letters day after day after day after day you start getting this sense of OK how much of that do you need to hear the you say I'm just I got to do something there's a couple who you visit and you visited quite a lot of people who who who write these letters in the back of the book that are notes about where they are no it's a bit like watching the the end of the movie and everything scrolls up you know and somebody is a teacher and somebodies you know doing something else anyway here's a couple and there's a so heartbreaking story indeed because they lost somebody in the Trade Center on the day of the attacks Thomas and Joanne Meehan. What was the point of of that letter I mean why the why did Thomas and Joe on me and feel what they should be writing to the president as a beautiful letter they were telling the story basically of their daughter. Working that day and and how it was that they came to discover that she was at work when the planes hit and how it was for them and the other families to have to deal with. Not just the grief of losing but not even knowing where the body parts of your last one just was there and she worked for a big transatlantic reinsurance agency called counterfeiters General lot of British people were over there working in that office and way way up high on top of the trade. Yes And and it the point of the letter was not just to give sort of like the gruesome horrible details this poor family had to go through but in the end really it was and I'm writing you know don't forget you know we can't forget are the ones who we've lost and if we stop talking about them we're going to forget and and so and the writing on the About This Place the teens almost mythical significance in the story of 911 and that's the Fresh Kills landfill in New Jersey where the the sort of sort of dreamy and went I mean when everybody had finished looking for remains that were still a load of stuff that was taken off and they're just saying how awful this is you know that there are still human relics in there. Yeah and the way that they go to visit their their daughter is is to get in to be driven in a garbage truck to the to a dump and into that you know with the flag on top you know and now this is not disses not how we want to be remembering the fallen. Really sad and you know and that's a story that kind of has gone off the radar you know we forget and they're saying we mustn't ever forget their daughter certainly. And then there are sort of the road throws and I came across a lovely left her about the value of money from a young a grad student couple who have sent the president $15.00 in 202012 for his reelection campaign you know they actually list don't they the things that they could be doing with yeah $15.00 yeah everything like from buying a pizza to just just all the things they could do with that $15.00 but instead they sent it. To the president and by the way I think I don't know if we ever got to say this in the book but this of nother follow up to that family was that they ended up getting pizza delivery from Air Force One. Really. Just as one of the many thanks. Cecilia Sears it became characters you know like all these folks became the characters that were talked about in the White House. What about well talk about something became account for woman teacher called Money Hazelton she loses her job as a teacher and then she finds herself in a game show. It's crazy she was lovely so Marty able to loses her job you know and she's she's just really angry because it's her whole life she has devoted herself to to teaching and to to educating you know and to building she's a nation builder by being a teacher and she loses her job she writes to the president to say you know what if I lose in my like how can I done everything right and how is it that now I have to walk around unemployed and able to do the thing that I'm so good at. And she ends up getting a note back from the president who says in handwriting among other things he says I'm rooting for you so Marni to her this letter and these words I'm reading through for you from Barack Obama become you know the biggest thing that she's ever got she takes that letter everywhere she takes it on job interviews she takes it everywhere and finally even takes it to a game show Who Wants To Be A Millionaire the she gets to be a contestant on and she reads it on the air and then she ends up not getting the $1000000.00 she doesn't win. For the stove she's got this is something and she gets a wonderful consolation prize is not goes on better than she then she went to. And yes she gets and she finally you know she realizes Wow I just got $25000.00 or something how might it complaining but what ends up happening with her is she carries this letter from job interview to job interview is she ends up getting hired back at the school district that fired her and getting promoted and promoted and promoted to become super and attendant of the entire district so that is like a beautiful success story the. Levitt let me finish because we have to with the story of you visiting the mail room in the White House and the the day after the 2016 election and that's a pretty. Pretty unvarnished the kind of disappointment isn't it. Was a really tough day you have to imagine here in the U.S. You know we were in Expect we were everybody was expecting the same outcome you know we were all kind of gearing up for OK hellery Clinton is going to be our president. And all of that and you know that was a little bit easy for the White House to imagine because you know it's the same party that are in the same transition team probably and maybe maybe a lot of them would get to keep their jobs yes sort of a handover you know instead you know and they had invited me to come to the mailroom because it's going to be so wonderful we're going to hear from America celebrating the 1st woman president and then the middle of the night I'm thinking oh no you know I don't even know sir going to want me to come anymore this is a shock so I went and. They described it is basically America in meltdown mode with the kind of mail they were getting in and they were sweeping I mean it was it was shock it was a funeral it could have been a funeral how many were at 1st as Barack Obama still get he says he's getting about 250000 a year so that's about you know in a week. So I think people are still. Reaching out to him it's a unique relationship that people have with him it's. It's I don't know it's sort of fatherly or something I want to write back oh yeah oh yeah he's a team still in place that helps him with that small everything's much smaller but . You still he still wants to hear. And do you have any knowledge about how the the present White House deals with mail Well you know I tried I have tried and I keep trying to find out but unfortunately they don't answer and the few folks they have been able to reach have told me that they have signed agreements that they're not allowed to talk so I don't know why they would be at a lot sort of the mail room but they're not allowed to so we don't actually know what's going on we just have to use our imagination. Jeanne Marie Laskas restocking about her book of letters to Obama and it's just after half past 3 from digital on smartphones and tablets this is B.B.C. 5 I mean you see news now with Claire Graham a group of Nobel Prize winners has risen to leaders in the brakes in negotiations urging them to reach a deal in order to be tax science the latter says science needs the flow of people and ideas across borders to resume a has said person might have to accept an extension to the transition period but insisted that it would be over well before the summer of 2020 takes she told M.P.'s that a withdrawal deal with the E.U. Was 95 percent agrees although the issue of the Irish border was still outstanding . A man's been charged with murder after the discovery of a 25 year old woman's body at her home in east London Muhammad Ali who's $33.00 is accused of killing. And researchers of human Curry has find that microscopic plastic particles are increasingly making their way into the human cut academics from a small study discovered tiny particles of up to 9 different types of plastic in a cotton has a sport it's 10 wins in a row for Arsenal thanks to the magic of Mesut Ozil can do Gionta by a replay was English was was yes a German instrumental in Arsenal sensational 1st goal in that 31 win at home to Leicester City. In the 1st half a force that they are America by man 2nd half price by women's is $10.00 successive victories for Arsenal for the 1st time since 2007 and moves in I am resigned up to 4th in the Premier League side. Without that little girl maybe. Not on the like oh we want about what they think of the liberation and on the March of the 90 minute I think. That with a very very big key to the Baby Big 11 also in the in our quality Christiane or in our case says his lawyers a confident as he answered questions and eventis Champions League news conference about ripe allegations against him Katherine my organs and urged to rape her in a Las Vegas hotel in 2009 he denies the accusations I'm up your man we did this statement so weeks ago of course I'm not gonna lie on this situation I'm very happy my lawyers they are confidence and of course I am too also the most important I enjoy the football I enjoy my life the rest I have people who take care of my life and of course do true always coming in 1st positions or I'm good Ventus face Manchester United in the Champions League later United manager Josie Marino say he's happy at Old Trafford and wants to see out his contract at the club after being linked with a return to reanimate dread Rainier's deal runs until 2020 Pep Guardiola has again claim Manchester City did not have the feel of Champions League winners and urged supporters to propel the club forward they face shut down to the US This evening I was born in Barcelona to start to play then and there when you were. Late in your blood in your body the only way to survive is when they saw my team last season and this is when the man is a concise of the club we are so honestly you're still we're not ready to win it that doesn't mean it won't we are not going to try to West Ham have confirmed that when you're under a young Malenko will be sidelined for around 6 months after undergoing a Killie surgery he was forced after the defeat to taunt him on Saturday 7th Harringay Bradley chance to cause the biggest upset of this season's 1st round of the F.A. Cup is after they were drawn home to League One A.F.C. Wimbledon you can see the. Full draw on the B.B.C. Sport website they said Marna say you signed bold he's unlikely to sign a deal without a financial contribution from a 3rd party the minus side they have made a contract proposal broken down into football on commercial terms but who are not trying with the same until and if an agreement is reached right now life lives on the lookout for our next commentary stuff what I don't push it if you know what young person taste 11 to 15 years of sport and loves talking about says there was a shit to do is go to B.B.C. Dog tag slash young commentator with a kid and sex with the money come by country experience the F.A. Cup Final Wimbledon cricket international Test match all the 6 Nations the competition closes at 9 am on the 29th of October See their website for full terms and producing to see young commentators the new print B.B.C. Radio 5 life. Now a serious discussion of games and politics and how much have you paid for all those ups you have on your phone here's game on Hello this is game on and I'm Adam also heard of the is a small city half white nearly between Gothenburg and Stockholm I was there last year for the Sweden game conference which is held by the university there in that small city there this time is Hayden Taylor from Games Industry don't because the news website and Hayden you've heard from the C.E.O. Of the soft massive Now that's the studio that's putting together the division. The Division One of course set in New York around about Christmas time this one so in Washington the citizens militia is there and he's told everybody in the whole that politics isn't really going to play a part in this particular iteration the story which is striking somebody was a lot isn't it would be and she said I specifically was Ubisoft doesn't take a stance if you make. It it's like that back away from any sort of little interpretation I have gangs which I think when you're get is you know in this dystopian future where you militias running around with gunning down is maybe a little bit difficult. But ultimately I think part of the point he's trying to make yourself massive can't stand up on a platform and say X. Y. Is good that creating mass multimedia consumer goods really and so yeah he is trying to tread a line somewhere in the middle. I don't really think ultimately So this is one of the quote you have an author who says it's also bad for business is to about why they don't take a stand in current politics unfortunately if you want the ONLY So it's also bad for business unfortunately I'm I'm. They're very badly if you want the honest truth but it is interesting and it is a discussion that we have and it's an ongoing discussion we have with our users so they understand the game is going to be seen with a political tinge they simply don't want to discuss what their take is I mean they are a studio there in Sweden this setting a game in Washington you know at the moment there seems to be a lot of bipartisanship going on inside the inside Washington insider but all across America so there's the idea that they can then want to position to talk to the Americans about their own problems but they're making a game which is almost commenting on it is interesting isn't it it's a cover it's a it's a very the link there's a linkage isn't there but it but it's not an easy one to explore thing we can except that can't we Yeah absolutely and I think with the division to I mean everything. Political right everything like ham sandwiches the cartoons and everything but it's really hard to separate politics. At any rate endeavor I think just so intrinsically linked and I saw think. Like you say I understand where they're going by trying to not make a state statement but dystopian fiction particularly becomes more popular during times of social or people's social turmoil so it's fiction like the Division 2 is you would think would be kind of reflective of a lot of the armies that people are feeling in modern difficult heartens I think the trial completely remove yourself from is it's an impossible ask really. The wall over there a term you're a gamer wrote back in June an article called If You be soft wants to cling on to Clancy it's time to talk politics he makes a lot of very good points about the fact that the soft have kept the kind see Brand there you know the Rainbow 6 seats and so on and so on and so forth and that stuff is always been a no vote lead political in a very civil right wing view of geopolitics the effectiveness of intervention you know the guy's going to difficult parts of the world and doing the right thing he explores it very fully in this new got a lovely quote from the creative director on him Division 2 saying I love the coldness of the 1st game and to be able to go to D.C. Energy get through the humidity and hot some of the East Coast weather I mean wow and then say it just struck struck 2 slightly odd I mean I mustn't go the article is there for people to read the other thing is I spoke to Dan He was the executive producer on Far Cry 5 and when I asked him about you know the relationship between what we're seeing in America and their representation of us of the rise of a right wing religiously motivated cult he was he was at pains to say this grew out of the environment that we wanted to explore this was an exploit it was just a kind of a happy accident. Yes I remember seeing you here night and yeah. There is a real reluctance among especially you know higher ups in the game studios to ever really affiliate themselves into ever kind of make a point about anything really and I think it goes back to this idea that it's bad business and I don't necessarily think it is I mean I could be wrong. But I don't necessarily think it is bad to actually explore. It to really get into the meat of what your game show and I suppose you could argue against that you know Far Cry 5 was one of the most successful games of 2018 it sold millions of units and that was it was massively criticized for pulling its punches when it came to the aspect of really kind of exploring religious extremism in America so maybe they do have this case and making it a bit more cookiecutter a bit sort of safe and pulling back from the you know the political overtones really is the only way these multimillion dollar budget gains can actually get made and thrive. You to him out to politics I think is what the main theme there is a the event is a run to what are people from the smaller studios saying are they being more open about their wanting to talk about the current situation around the world or in the country is going to say I mean so there was one person Emily Grace book who's a former narrative design a tell tale games and she was giving a bit of a post-mortem on telltale and she was quite open in support of unions for example which specially when you consider you know the situation of workers' rights in America and in the games industry in particular unions are becoming an increased area for discussion so I think it is perhaps easier for ready staff of smaller studios because she's now working at a different studio so I think smaller studios because she's now working at a different studio so I think maybe is the is if the small studios to be a bit more open you know they're there. Not accountable to their shareholders or to the stock price or anything like that which you know you have to be very careful shareholders or stock price or anything like that which you know you have to be very careful if you say something you know shareholders react negatively you could see it shop in stock and there is an arc with these things with ultimately. I think it's kind of the nature of like free market capitalism that people are always going to be walking on eggshells around contentious issues and seems people we can be walking on eggshells around the people at Rockstar as well the rock star just announced just today is just before we recorded this their staff can now talk about their working conditions on social media and people are saying anonymously one is not bad you don't have to do the crunch you don't have to do the 100 Hour working but you also get the feeling the. They might have to do it negatively assessed if they're not doing it with crunch culture even if there's not a you know somebody stood up on high cracking the whip there is this was a point that was made again health help post-mortem if there is a culture of trying to prove your own passion and try to prove that you know you're the one who cares the most that can then create almost like a culture of guilt I think everyone else feels that they have to prove that action and it's something which is possibly fostered in the school environment as well are you sure that you are the most passionate person in the room and I don't even know if it's necessarily you know management I think sometimes it is management really pushing it but I think sometimes it's almost self-inflicted and that's not to say that these people you know well willfully like really really sort of damaging themselves like this I think it's like it's very hard when there is a culture of everyone trying to sort of be the best that you kind of have to keep up or maybe sort of be ostracized or something I think it's a very good position for a lot of developers in the and we've turned I think a telltale as well they were to about people can take leave whenever they like you know as long as your work's been done you can take leave and there was a man one of the articles I saw that was talking about the collapse but those same just simply didn't do it because it was the idea that if you were doing that somebody else is picking up your work you know you really being you can lead to play and all that kind of stuff a lot of these points are coming out of the article from the vulture the gobo put together we actually talked to some of the whose's who are brothers there in New York and they made the point that they were always saying oh well you know we've been really committed this project we've been doing 100 hour crunch and people are becoming and saying well yeah but for a game this big and this taken this long why on earth are you still using crunch and then we get the spelling of now you can talk about it on social media and so on and so forth it's a very complicated issue I'm not sure you and I can address it directly but we can talk about maybe hopefully we'll get some of these people. Up in the industry and at some point soon and put these kinds of questions to them I think unionization is in exceptionally dirty word in the industry for whatever reasons I mean I'll put my hand up and say I've been unionized every job or I could join a union I joined a union that's just the way that I like to play the game but then I'm working in journalism over here in the U.K. I'm not in the US I don't know how it plays there you might ask those questions what are you seeing next Hayden how many more how much more time if you don't have the. Well tomorrow is my sort of final day actually on the show floor where I'm doing a few things I'm possibly on a panel about political game narratives money get back and there's a really interesting panel about using board games for therapy which although doesn't necessarily fit within my remit as a video games business journalist does does massively interest me. But yeah there's a lot of to sort of just general discussion about politics and games and then more parties. And you know exposed to that particular cat out of the pack Haydon us that's not good politics minuscule good. It's a great article thank you for bringing to our attention and thanks for coming on the show now that's right thank you very charming out of well it's move on from talking about what's been happening in and over the Sweden games week to talk about Google Play which is going to be 10 years old the App Store is responsible for over 2 thirds of the downloads across the world 70 percent in fact of the world's apps a download it from the guy who play apps store and they have been some 330000000000 with a B apps downloaded from the service which is almost twice as much as what we've seen from Apple's app store however only $85000000000.00 has been spent in Google Play which is 65 percent of the $130000000000.00 spent on the App Store for bombs from at any is with me Paul you guys have been looking at this why is it the people who are using Android are actually putting their hands in their pockets with the regularity of the people who are buying their stuff on I.I.S. Are putting their hands in their pockets once the difference do you think it's really about the different devices that the systems run so if you look at Android there's a whole plethora of relatively cheap devices that run on Android and that's always been the case for Android and it's got more so time if you look at Android go which is the sort of little Andrey lite version it's really easy to get a cheap device which is run. Android for a smartphone and therefore it's really the market that associates more with Android if you look at Apple on the other on the other and that i Phones and the whole i OS ecosystem that goes around that actually very much targeted people who are by their nature a big spender and yes you see that we've always seen that but I think it's become particularly prevalent in recent years the biggest driver of downloads growth at the moment is emerging markets it's India Indonesia places like this you have a very heavily weighted towards Android apps a huge propensity to consume apps and spent time in apps but you know realistically there's just not the same level of willingness to spend right now is it also the fact that if I am making an app for I.O.'s I have to actually submitted to Apple and get it approved to go into the perfume garden but if I'm producing something which runs on Android I can just produce and release it so I could theoretically with a couple of friends build an app that lets me at the Odio For instance we have this is the job by those these things I think about but if I wanted to do that on it with an I.R.S. Device I would have to be submitting it for approval and get me cleared and there are hurdles in front of me there on the quite some hurdles to a crater on Android that there are an I.S.O. On them I think they are different for sure you're right and you see that in the kinds of numbers that come through from the number of apps that have gone on Google Play we were looking at this as part of this this 10 year anniversary and there's almost this crazy I was almost 10000000 apps that have been put on the Google Play Store since its inception now of that 10000000 there is around 2.8 something like that that are currently live now so for sure that the rules are starting a different Google Play does offer a bit more flexibility in terms of launching apps and managing and controlling apps but I don't think that's a big driver of revenues if you look at the you know the. The big apps that generate money that the games at candy crush these kinds of things but also the more subscription apps you know Netflix attend these sorts of things but they're present on both platforms it's not a case that they're on one not on the other it's just that in the main people on Android not going to part with the money quite as freely as owners of i Phones and i Pads Well our Candy Crush Saga I think we're going to be completely unsuited to learn is the most downloaded going to air and indeed is the biggest of by Custer consumers spend in the U.K. Now and it has right and the top game all time by downloads there are some games which have just landed with the audience and have just stuck haven't there we were going to be playing Candy Crush Saga well into the next century on these on these metrics are we. It's entirely possible the King are going to be there forever this is it's interesting isn't it there is a no there's an open market inside the price thaw there is this open playing field as it were but when it hits big there's something the hopes are going to cross over I mean did you look at them and is there a way of saying you can put a game into the store where you can't necessarily get an audience unless you are of a certain size or are prepared to spend a certain amount of money on advertising that is there a relationship there as well I guess you see that to a certain extent you see those big names always appearing at the top you see you know Activision Blizzard King supercell say you do tend to see the names at the top there you know Rocio Angry Birds these kinds of things but there are ones that have stayed around and got there that maybe were you know less expected so 8 ball pool has been consistently up there and features even if you look at U.K. Downloads it's the force most downloaded game ever on Google Play and in U.K. Over time. You know even the sort of hyper casual games like street ninja which you may have may have played come along and do pretty well so I don't think it right at the top certainly you see those big gaps and big companies playing a part but but there at this plenty of room plenty of room smaller down and in fact one way to look at it is you say how many apps have generated more than a 1000000 dollars in consumer spend and if you look just at the U.K. It's $310.00 apps which have generated more than a $1000000.00 of spend in the U.K. Since it the place that has been around so you see it's not it's not just contained to a handful is plenty of scope if you hit the right end gauge with people to really generate downloads and Sony generate money through the Google Play store you know one of the things is on my phone actually a Subway Surfers which was my daughter's picture yes so she's yeah that on my phone is to where this is the other thing of course I've probably got as many apps as most people which is something around $93.00 according to your research but people are only using $36.00 of the monthly I've got one that's for taxis in Europe I mean I've got it on the fan cause I end up in Europe and farmers have neither taxi frankly which is not you know on the realms of possibility so that's an injury mostly people get these things they don't delete them do you think they really are doing more aggressive housekeeping on their phones or is this just the kind of way that we use our phone is there just in case I think it's the it's the way we operate and it's interesting if you look at other markets so you look at India say as a market that's really exploding with growth in in app usage more than half of the access that people have on their phone they're using really regularly whereas once you get to markets like the U.K. That starts to tail off and if you get to markets like the U.S. Japan it's even less way to getting more to that one industry and the apps that are actually on the phone are installed and I think there's a real there's a certainly need to do some housekeep. For us all all it's individuals but if you look at our behavior what's happening is we're spending more and more time in apps but we're starting to consolidate that time a little bit being a bit more choosy spending more time on a selected number of Act I think that's going to be one of the trends we see we see actually it's you know as we talked about last week on the program when people who are into Warhammer 40 K. And more AM have the pile of shame all of these unused unmade up models people have got to kind of the part of showing that in their own phones has of me as a hoarding instinct which I find very straight as a book buyer on why these people who buy books never read them just got a huge stack of them need to go through now I know that they're not simply don't address them it is a peculiar thing that we have these behaviors which we take with us to new devices you know this is an established pattern and you seas of people repeating it with a new thing which makes me wonder Palm who just announced this new sort of a friend little companion parasite found to go with your mind Phone does a device like that what does that do to the mix is that somewhere where your you have only the most highly used highly trafficked apps that you you want on your little phone and you've got of a mind from full of yet more stuff. Yeah I think we could potentially see that I think these things or around your warmer points interesting is warmer is actually coming into mobile gaming now there's a trading card game that's coming along which blends app gaming and it's an app experience with the real world as well so I think all these things are kind of getting a bit more blended together but certainly in terms of the concentration would you have a companion device running your top 5 or 6 X. Then you know I think I think there's a we're starting to see that now more actually starting to see companies publishers trying to be more relevant to ours as individuals by partnering up and saying hey you know we know you love this kind of coffee or you know you go to the cinema or you even gauge of these kinds of activities so let's try and bring those links and those loyalty aspects into into our app so you're going to choose our app as one of those decreasing number that you really invest your time and kind of partnership side I think is quite interesting as well in the app space now so cut the cost of coffee at the tracks the loyalty points that you've got all the the app from new app from want to slam so you don't have your little cup paper card stamped anymore when you spend 10 pounds or more in the shop you actually have your or your app or card and they're linked together might stand suggesting to me Have you considered you need to be using this kind of message or or you mind Joy this kind of game has got to be that kind of synergy Yes Yes The I definitely am starting to starting to see that already and I think they'll be going to be wanting one of the trends going thought of you next year gosh that's fascinating So all of these cousins of conversations with Lynn lead me to thinking there's so much more that we're going to have to explore and keep across as time goes on in there is never going to get less it's only ever going to get more but the question is are people going to be targeted more closely are they going to be offered to more selectively so they're going to be there's going to be more but less you're going to see more you want to see less but there will be more that's just something is going to happen is it yeah I think so and if you look at you know. We look at how our lifestyles have changed and how much more of our life is within that app space now than it was I mean if you go back to that early days of the App Store 2012 we were you know we were faffing around downloading tools that could turn our smartphones into torches and you know flash an Adobe Acrobat so we could read documents that kind of thing whereas now if you look at it it's very much lifestyle and the most the biggest monetizing app in the U.K. Up outside of games over the history of Google plays been tender so you look at tend Netflix Pandora music these are the big apps that we're actually spending significant time and money and of course that's on top of Facebook who are the you know the giant in this in terms of downloads with you know with their 4 apps or watch that messenger Facebook and Instagram which is consistently up at the top so you know we live so much more of our lives in apps than we have done but you know it's inevitable that they're targeting aspect will increase and should get better I mean it should make more sense for us to make things more relevant so it's over time now we could have a conversation about the way the tender is going to fight the relationship made it but we're not going to go there and I always tell you I think you're absolutely right and we will keep watching this price for my family thanks so much for coming on OK No problem thank you. For news. For anyone else this B.B.C. 5 Live for a quarter time for the B.B.C. News with clear ground in the main news on 5 Live as scientists urge leaders to reach agreements over break sets and then sports a perfect 10 fast as they turn on the style against Leicester. This is B.B.C. 5 some of the biggest names in science have written to to reason May and the European Commission president. Pleading for them he agree a breaks a deal the grip which are mainly new bell Prize winners say there's a real risk that many will leave the U.K. Otherwise these researchers work at the front says Crick Institute in London I think that definitely makes me thinking of other places but U.K. . I'm thinking about other options in Europe in Central Europe or even maybe going back to the Canadian I'm currently funded by the E.U. And I was for my Ph D. Which I also did here in the U.K. . And I know that lots of this money will not arrive in the U.K. Anymore and of course that's a big concern Donald Trump is threatening to boost his country's nuclear weapons to put pressure on Russia to comply with an arms control treaty the president says he'll withdrawal from the agreement because he doesn't think Moscow has stuck to it the Kremlin denies that Christensen is the director of the Nuclear Information Project at the Federation of American Scientists I and many other people think this is are really stupid idea and basically will hand Russia a way out it will remove the pressure from Russia rather than increasing it and it will give the United States and NATO nothing in return so this is really a strange decision.

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