Murdered as a result of a large gambling when they've also revealed the pair were strangled their bodies were found in Mr Brown's home in new but lane in the early hours of Monday morning the number of patients having to wait more than 4 hours in hospital any department says more than doubled in the last 4 years according to research by the b.b.c. In the last 12 months more than 3000000 people experienced longer waits than the official target and millions of pounds worth of valuables stolen in the Hatton Garden raid can finally be returned to their owners more than 32 months after the biggest robbery in English legal history and estimated 25000000 pounds worth of jewelry gems and cash was taken during the Easter right back in 2015 with approximately 2 thirds of the loot remaining uncovered were now the sport headlines here is that Nigel bit made the top manager merits your point you Tino says fans shouldn't get carried away after 5 English teams qualified for the knockout stages of the Champions League for the 1st time Spurs joined Chelsea Liverpool Manchester United and Manchester City in the last 16 but parts of Tino says it won't mean much if the teams fail to reach the latter stages and in the Europa League Arsenal manager Arsene Wenger says he'll failed quite an experienced team against Borisov tonight despite his side having already won group h. Thanks I will now Elizabeth routinely has London's weather the outbreaks of rain will clear their way eastwards through the 1st part of the afternoon and it should brighten up they'll be some sunshine around the winds will ease down and the temperatures will start to cool off he will end the day on around 7 or 8 degrees Celsius overnight tonight some very cold air coming down on the north westerly wind with the laser one else he degrees Celcius the chance of $12.00 wintry showers taking out towards north western areas of the capital b.b.c. Radio and it is now 3 minutes past one we've got more people wanting to leave London than any other city this. This state is going to mix with rich and poor living next to each other b.b.c. Radio. Show. Has so much job. Oh. I think. That. That. Does. Have very good afternoon it's nice to be back. Filling stuff in Waterloo this morning and I was on the base. The announcements being given out by children I was just saying is this now a common occurrence or is it something that lead up to the festive period or did they wouldn't something and. Bacon was all night she was. Taken straight back straight. Right at the top of the show Alexander Sascha knew it was up but also son of Anthony Newley and Joan Collins so excited very talented artists. Are going to be talking to a cartoonist Chris Riddell all rebel. About. Not just one of his characters looks very much like a carrot to. The very famous Christmas commercial but more about that later. Time. And the barking hour without a web I haven't seen or spoken to all since I was at this big dollar for the Mayhew rescue animals rescue center over in Kensal Green they had a great big ol at the corner rooms it was fantastic Ashley and Marc Abrahams was there a television vet who's going to be talking to us because if you've been reading the tabloids today you'll know that Lucy's law is under discussion yet again that old chestnut you know where people most animal lovers are trying to ban poppy farming and that was the very 1st inside out I ever filmed for the b.b.c. In London and we've not moved on at all so yes a lot of these massive charities these rescue homes of full of dogs the been abandoned or sick through puppy farming so we get to be talking about that but I very much like to hear from anybody who uses homeopathy with their animals because where I'm going to be talking to a vet who practices both traditional medicine and homeopathy in his practice but there are now you probably read about these people saying you're putting the health of your animal at risk by purely administering homeopathy and most vets are saying you should use both. If you're going to use what if you're going to use any of pity use it to complement traditional medicine so we're talking about that as well but as I say right at the top of the show Sasha knew Alexander nearly son of Anthony Newley is going to be joining me to talk about his memoir. This is his dad. The. New. You. It's a new. Fish in the sea. You know how. River running free. You know our. Lawsuit on the tree. You know. It's a new dollar and it's a new day it's a new law. In good. Dragon Fly out in the sand you know what I mean butterflies are having fun you know what I. Swear. That's me. Old were you. Bold. Styles when you shot. You know how the who sent the. Who freed. La. I know I mean you would it's a new dog day it's a new. Really good. Oh my goodness I've never heard that before but I've listened to a lot of Anthony Newley and I am so pleased to say his son Alexander or may I call you Sasha is sitting in front of me welcome to The Afternoon Show Hi Jerry thank you you have indeed called me Sasha and thank you for playing that song which is so beautiful I mean really I am always watching you listening to it with my great big old headphones or not and you just sat with your eyes closed listening to it. Was very personal question but do you remember those days do you remember when that was recorded roughly how old you was well that song was created for a show called Stop the roar of the greasepaint smell of the crowd which my father co-wrote lovely brick of in 1965 which is the year of my birth so and all my father's big shows were. All his children were born during the writing of the big shows it's very interesting so. I remember you know 4 years on from that time my memories start to kick in and what I remember it's just this amazing life in Beverly Hills you know with my father and mother the toast of the town and my father at the absolute white hot pinnacle of his talent you know I'm now going to flatter you because it's amazing looking at your face you are a true combination of those 2 you when you arrived I went to greet you were over by the water cooler and I just push you so much like your father now sitting here I can see your mother as well what do you think you've taken after both of them physically Yes I think earlier in my life everyone body was prone to say gosh I like your dad but I think mom is creeping in a bit more now as I get older or course I'm you know to be to be the offspring of these 2 in kick in can destine massive personalities is just it's a privilege you know I'm going to now read the introduction properly so Alexander new really is a contemporary artist and writer who's portrayed as hang in the National Portrait Gallery in Washington and also at the v.n.a. . His works include several major figures including Billy Wilder Christopher Reeve Judi Dench and all of a stone he is as we say the son of Joan Collins and Anthony Newley and he's now written his memoir detailing his life growing up in a famous but dysfunctional family the breakdown of his parents' marriage in the background running all the way through this is London in the swinging sixty's that's why I just love this book because as you know we've been hearing about Mandy Rice Davies I love London in the sixty's I was born in the wrong time to Sasha actually I was but I would put it to you all I mean we see even with our Wolf family on all families dysfunctional do you think you'll who is even more No I think you're absolutely right I think you know no family is perfect I love that thing that Leonard Cohen said you know there's a crack in everything that's how the light gets in I mean I really think that we all have a drama with our family and the drama is good it's in livening it just so happened that the drama I had with my family was so amplified everything was so amplified cafe with such these big personalities you know I think every kid feels like their parents a superstar of you know just so happened that my parents were superstars were everybody and apps and we still have work and we still have Joe I guess he's one of the few remaining Hollywood superstars their own anymore you know they're all God they can bending around doing yoga and drinking gallons of water and living life like the rest of us she still lives the life of she lives her life install and Superstar and I love when I went to meet you just now I said you spend nothing in this book because you describe what's laid out on her dressing table in every everything that you want to read all the detail was that important fuse a child did you talk about the smell of her yes the way she will absolutely I mean everybody knows the public persona. And people know a great deal about my mother's self portraits that she's created through her memoir work but I think it's also additionally fascinating to see her through the eyes of her. You know because there's a whole behind the scenes world that I detail in the book. She was a goddess to me you know she really was and you were you were talking about her dressing table you know I used to go in ice to sneak into her room when she was in there and sneak into her dressing room and look at you know open a closet and look at her extraordinary costumes and shoes and everything she was such a presence for me and there were times when she was away on location that's true and I missed her but then she'd come back and she'd have these incredible stories you know she was filming in Japan and she'd bring me back a kimono No you know and then and then she had all this great location footage so I used to piece together the location footage of her with you know Jack Palance or Tony Curtis and Roger Moore you know so it was this incredibly rich she was a very very rich presence for me this is what you write when you're living in 30 South Street so where was South Street it's actually in Mayfair So this is before you went to so and when you let went to Queensway didn't you did you go down that way yes you were moved everywhere where that is right when we 1st arrived from California in 1970 it was quite a bad time in London with the winter of discontent so I shifted from this amazing like Jay Gatsby like world to London in the middle of winter you know with the trash piled high in Barclay Square it was such an incredible scene shift but we were living in Mayfair myself my soon to be step father was the accountant at Apple Records so the Beatles were at our house you know Paul was there I used to play with Ringo Starr and he taught me to ride a bike you know it was just amazing all these people around. Yeah so we were in Queensway for a short spell of time but then my mother Ruth moved in with the wrong cat and that's when the fun or. Started up where it started again but yes is this is well still at 30 South Street mommy was t. Shirts and jeans that her hair is long and black and shiny and she's beautiful eyes a big little eyelashes are big and longer than anybody else's mother's she makes me cucumber and tuna fish sandwiches and jugs of orange age and she buys me Jaffa cakes with marmalade filling and veggies chocolate digestive biscuits for dipping into tea the chocolate in London tastes so good and you can tell how you love coming back this side of the pole and yes and I think I always say to everyone here is a parent the best gift you can give your kids is to keep them travelling you to I mean it must you say you went to school in London you weren't happy at some of the schools and you were dragged back to Hollywood but it does mean wherever your plonk you will still always rise to the surface do you think that's absolutely right I mean I think I think I had this extraordinary opportunity to just take it all so much experience you know sure there's a bit of a downside to that nomadic existence but the upside I think more than makes up for it which is that I mean I'm a glutton for experience to this day I love traveling I love challenge I love taking on the experience I think my childhood prepared me for that and it gave me the tools to be an artist because I think it's an artist you have to love the are known you have to want to travel into it all the time and embrace it and Mom had gypsy blood you know and to this very she she does she loves moving around and I I find that exciting too so I don't regret that experience that you both your parents Jewish then you say that you or fathers outlook was very. So he really bought into it explain what you mean by that well dad was he very much lived the examined life I think he felt like a bit of an outsider you know he's born in the east then he didn't know his dad. And he was always very aware that he was sort of from the wrong side of the track. And I think the way portrays himself in a lot of his shows principally in the Stop the world I want to get off he says he's a little chap the Courtney guy and throughout the story of the show he rises to be finely one of the snobs he enters snobs club at the end of that so he was always very very class conscious so I think at the risk of generalizing I think that slight feeling of being an outsider is part of the Jewish experience and also this an introspective thing and the fact that for the Jewish artists at least I think making art really really says that they're saving their lives one of my favorite artists is good stuff Mahler and when you listen to his music you really think this intensity of if he couldn't make this music he would have jumped off a bridge you know and I think that was like that but let's talk about your Because we're going to round out the time and that plays a massive role in this and it's also what you are now you know renowned artist and you've got there in your own right although Do you before we talk about you are do you think you would because of who you are connected to it helps I mean you've certainly proved your talent but do you think it helped to get exhibitions on and say I think it I think it the 2 sides that it helped to open doors but I think people are almost also perhaps a little more inclined to want to say well he's only getting that open door because of this they're a little more inclined to sort of want to bring you down so you have to be even better than the best otherwise they're going to think someone helped you there's an element of that yeah I think here you're battling upriver someone so when did they see the talent in you because you were given ill lessons when well. I wasn't well when I was very young I went to this great school called King Alfred's and. Up in Hampstead it's still there it's amazing school we called all our teachers by their 1st names I had this amazing teacher called dorm who when I was 6 or 7 everything I painted everything I drew she was so positive and so I made this very early connection between. Making art and joy and being loved which is never going away. And then when I got a little blue when I was 8 and I did actually go into therapy and I had this amazing therapist who did art therapy with me so she opened me up with giving me crayons and drawings and that's how I found a way to speak about my experience so I yeah I've very very lucky with these angels coming into my life very early on and opening up art as a way for me to to be myself and find find the meaning of myself and it was so a lot of people who knows that generation your generation thought you called your teachers by have fascinating series I'm telling everyone that never happened but you know I mean you a lot younger me maybe often set in for my generation maybe yours to tell I just want to study all its people you know come on now you're never going to get through life that your parents but they obviously were quite thrilled with 8 Absolutely and I think they they weren't going to get in the way of that at all and they were you know even when I did kind of crazy things at the age of 19 I disappeared and I went and I was lived as a recluse for years and I just painted and wrote and I really needed to immerse myself in my creativity they were just like we respect what you have to do and and then when they started to see the fruits of my labor the pictures coming out and dad especially was just bowled over and he really gave me the validation and so I knew I was on the right path at that tell me where you lived as a recluse is that in the book because I've got to know that that's not this all this is a bonus where did you live as I lived in a wonderful fishing village in Dorset called Lyme Regis wonderful which has been long associated with artist James Jane Austen wrote persuasion there John Fels lived in French Lieutenant's Woman was set there wonderful film and that's how I 1st saw was on the cinema screen I just thought where is this incredible place by the sea this large and I and I decided I wanted to move that how lovely because you have the. Fingertips you traveled all over the world but that was where you were going to get to pull your you know get the use the sources within you just start to cry and do they it seems from what you write and just from chatting to you that your parents and I love parents like this left you alone yes there's many people could say that's unlikely but I just think it's brilliant leave you alone to find your own way did they absolutely and I think that takes a lot of love yeah where not send out and it gives a child a lot of self belief because you're not being 2nd guessed guest and you're not being doubted you're being given the benefit of the doubt and that's a very precious thing that your parents can give you I think and more were you creating down there what was your all well it to be honest I made a lot of bad paintings at the beginning because I'm largely self-taught and developed by copying paintings of artists I particularly admire like an eagle and she learned Rembrandt and the great masters so I I really found my own technique and that took a long time so I'm glad I was in this sort of place of obscurity I could just experiment nobody was looking over my shoulder saying don't do that way don't go that way I really found my own way so when I did actually hit my own style it was uniquely mine and that's what excited to take forward into all areas of art that I go into and what your parents only east I guess I don't know never met your dad I've met your mom so she just whole thing that I would associate her almost is what I love actually here would that would she have said Sasha that's great but actually I don't get that could you use them as a barometer or not yeah I mean there's a I did a portrait of her in 92 and when I was very under the influence Lucien Freud says not the most flattering picture shall we say but to her great credit she hung it over the mantel piece in the drawing room and you know Michael Caine came to the house for dinner he looked her bloody hell is a Picture of Dorian Gray. But she didn't take it down you know. She was she was proud of this picture and it's a picture doesn't pull any punches you know but great credit she hung it oh do you live in London now I don't live in Queens Park you know living costs there and you could live anywhere again as I say because you've got connections and homes and your mom's got homes all over the world and you live in Queens Park I love that idea but as I say she dragged a lot of you around here there and everywhere and there is wonderful in the book where all the press you going Joan why are you leaving us when you're heading back to Hollywood and she went he leaves Yeah me and this is Dennis Healey said to just sort of. The country Yeah well it was it was the time of the quote unquote brain drain Yeah where taxes under Wilson was suddenly hiked sky high and a lot of the creative people couldn't handle the taxes anymore so they left and England lost a lot of very talented people overnight and Mom was part of that Exodus and logically she went back to Hollywood I was crestfallen Yeah I love to Hampstead and Kenwood House and the Heath and I was you know but we had to follow the work she had to follow the work yeah and as it turned out then we went into this great fascinating chapter in Hollywood in the early seventy's which was amazing and there's a lot about that in the book but there is a lot you know all the parties everything else and it's it's everything you hope would have happened in his life has happened do you have a family now I mean your own family you you a father I do I have a daughter I'm no longer with my my daughter's mother but I have this extraordinary daughter very very creative and artistic who I love because she said that's wonderful so it continues because I just wonder whether when you've had such as you said dysfunctional but then as we started we all come from dysfunctional families where do you try to create peace and order in New your own family or is that not always possible do you think of course you do try I think parenthood is the toughest job anybody will ever take on it's very difficult to get it 100 percent right but you just hope that over. Generation's you have more and more consciousness about what it is to parent well. But you know you have to let your kids as we were just talking about you have to let them be themselves you have to let them rebel sometimes are going to be times in life where they're going to need to keep you at a distance to a certain extent you got to be Ok with that you know like some parents are quite narcissistic and they need to be loved by their kids all the time yeah I think can be a bit damaging Yes No no I you know well I don't have kids yeah for all those reasons you just pointed out. Do you so you can answer this or not do you have a good relationship with your mom now has she read the book did you send her a copy of the book yes. I gave her the book about a year and a half ago when I 1st finished it she loved it and we sat we had a lunch and she was sick so we were talking about because of books books be an option for a movie and so she was taught we've talked about who would play her you know she said I think I would like Felicity Jones to play me if that was the time when that film just came out yes out. Anyway the science film but yes and we also she looked at the book again recently and we went over the excerpts that we're going to appear in the a Mail on Sunday so she's been very positive about it but you know she's such a pro I mean my version of events is not always exactly what hers was but to her great credit she said this is your story and I accept that its story and it's important to you and I you know and we've deep our relationship has deepened because we've because of this shared story that we have isn't it interesting that she's always current was a talent say I think she's never dated amazing you know people ask me about you know what makes her tick how is it possible that she can rejuvenate and I have her son don't know I mean she really is a force of nature she is a national treasure There's no 2 ways about you know I'm so chuffed because when my short an eventful marriage my husband gave me the Joan Collins book at beauty which you were photographed in that's you and your sisters just sitting by the side of her and she'd go. This big bow in her hair and it starts off and it says girls if you're ever depressed put a bell in your hair and I remember thinking right well if it's as simple as that but you were taught little boy that year and all the family a look at all of you look very very attractive family but there was this lovely closeness and I never thought I would ever meet you are just living in Hollywood that is but you're actually living in Queens Park. And not only that your work is in the d.n.a. Here in London that's right yeah yeah which places are in the bay and there's one piece in the permanent collection which is my I did 2 portraits of a very very marvelous gifted actor called Sinatra Hawthorne who was sadly no longer with us and in 93 he did a play called The madness of George the 3rd written by Alan Bennett and I was very very privileged to do 2 paintings of him as the Mad King one of which. And one of which went to the theater collection of the v.n.a. So that's the standing version of him as Mad King so people can go and see that you can read the whole story it's called unaccompanied minor a memoir it is so good it's just weight just all the detail is the detail I really want to know about your lives since I've read the book of beauty and we've been speaking to Sasha or should I say Alexander nearly and we're playing out with his dad thank you so much for coming in thank you so much. The wonderful Antony new day and I thank his sound for coming in it is a really good read as well. And that was excellent and nearly right it's just gone half past 1 time now for the nice. One is headlines at $130.00 on Greg McKenzie accident investigators have concluded that the driver of the tram that crashed in Croydon in south London last year killing 7 passengers and injuring dozens more had probably fallen asleep as he approached a sharp bend high speed in a final report on the accident they also criticised the tram operators saying they hadn't put in sufficient safety measures to prevent trams from coming off the rails to tech tiffs investigating the deaths of father and daughter Nahla Marie Brown in depth that weekend say there's no evidence to pull speculation that Mr Brown was murdered as a result of a lot of gambling when they've also revealed that the pair were strangled a record $400.00 people were arrested on suspicion of terrorism related offenses in the 12 months to September by around $140.00 on the previous year 41 of those arrests were related to 4 attacks in London at Westminster in March London Bridge Ambar Marcus and Jane Finch repack into. And passons green in September millions of pounds worth of valuable stolen in the Hatton Garden rate will be returned to their owners more than 32 months after the biggest robbery in English legal history and estimated 25000000 pounds worth of jewelry gems and cash was stolen during the Easter raid back in 2015 London's weather now any remaining rain will continue to clear with a sunny afternoon to follow however it will become increasingly cold were fresh North Wind westerly winds developing maximum temperature for the rest of a 12 degree Celsius 54 degrees Fahrenheit now the b.b.c. Radio London travel. A quick reminder that in Bloomsbury South Hampton Roads remains closed because of a burst water main between Russell Square and blue replace until the evening of the 10 Chelsea Embankment westbound closed for gas mains replacement work between Chelsea Bridge Road and Beaufort Street and till the middle of March stroke early April rather high tunnelers are to close for recovery to a broken down car although trapped traffic has been released it's very slow in both directions m 4 slow heading out of town on the elevated section Brantford because of an accident westbound junction 2 stretch of high road northbound queuing at Gleneagles road northbound closure of Stratton high road to Gleneagle road is also for gas main work and the 819 North Kensington scrubs lane might away very slow in both directions where temporary lights are still in for works really Reeves b.b.c. Radio and travel more for me just before tick this is London because the news is literally unraveling as I speak Holden has extended right up to the new King's Road I always smile when people say London will keep getting what we have to what choice do we have it's got just such strong spirit and a really amazing job this will it bring me back out to the wider to b.b.c. In London and maybe nationally this is Lunde. B.b.c. Radio London. J. C radio. This is from Amman who says I love love love your theme music Thank you Emma this is from. Linda who says that was a great interview Joe He was very gentle and very sweet this is Sasha nearly And you really brought the best out in him he seems very relaxed I thoroughly enjoyed the interview Thank you Linda he's very good looking as well if you don't mind my saying so right now I would like to talk about this child's announcement by children on the London underground during the rush hour it just was a bit of a surprise and to be honest I found totally inappropriate at a time maybe you know during the day when there's fewer people it would raise the Roy smile but you know it's not Disneyland is it it's the London Underground which is pretty depressing place pretty ruthless and you just need to get on and off it as soon as possible and you need to be able to hear the announcements will this morning on the Bakerloo at 9 o'clock it was hell on earth I cannot tell you the underground is so overcrowded and I was like shoved under someone's armpit someone's massive great old have a Sat was thrust into my face and they're now announcement saying please lower your have a size and there are so many announced in the middle of announcements like don't jump on the track don't drop anything on the track you have a sat down let the people get off suddenly these children are making announcements I'm not just what on earth is going on Sarah says Joe I would be running for a train otherwise I would call you in oh I was on the tube last week and I think maybe it was the Bakerloo line and I was freaked out when I heard a child speaking over the tannoy I had to listen several times and was looking around to see if someone more or. On the platform was taking the many many taking the mickey it almost felt like the excess East was suddenly taking control of the people on the platform so does anyone know what this is about is it something is it something in someone's won a prize that they can make platform announcements which is fair enough but none of us could understand what this child I think there were 3 different children was saying and also nobody's even faintly amused at that time of day everybody is holding their breath because of the stench of human beings packed into these carriages we just want to get in and get out so I'd love to know if anybody knows the story behind this 7 to 40000. Tis that is I love you but I'm. Linda is on the line in Holloway Hello Linda hi Joe Very well thank you now I was saying I was on the bacon on this morning very early on and amongst all the announcements there with children making announcements can you throw some light on the yes I've done the research for you jokers make partner work for London Underground Oh yeah not here not there but I rang him and I asked if he knew anything about it and he said he didn't so I said ring up their crappy trick treat him like. A brilliant yes. So basically what it is they have a lot of what they called passenger train incidents which is you know basically passengers doing stupid things like them going over to pick from a call when the train is coming and I was stunned into near the edge of the platform and just things like that right and so people just stopped listening to announcements because it just sort of becomes like why are you guess so Dad got local schoolchildren in her. Caught the announcement so that people would think hang on a minute you know to say you gave this sounds like a good story yeah you know what is it and it makes them listen to the message apparently it makes it makes people listen to the message. Thank you enough for finding out about this because I never heard anyone mention it before it certainly makes you listen my only comment to all criticism will be we couldn't understand what they were saying. But it proved a point because there was not only did we listen there was I contact everyone was looking rather like Hang on a moment is a kid doesn't mean so maybe maybe it does make his then listen for the future messages do you want I mean really you know he tells me that people do stupid things on the platform like you know topless women on the track and can watch us get down and dirty you know yeah he'll yeah interest yeah it's things I need. To try and cut down on the worst kind of incidents really it really is I. Try to avoid travelling on the tube I like travelling on buses the tube June the rush hour I mean one during the day is lovely but in the Russia we're not lovely I mean it's efficient but in the Russia just truly horrendous and. I couldn't believe the different announcements now they all know and you know there was say in fact one on Baker Street said look we've had so many incidents of people falling down the stay as police use the handrail everybody use the handrail don't try and I was thinking we never had these announcements before but don't forget as well people are walking around with the phones are not yet a fall and they're not paying attention no you know why they're walking off here to the platform when the trains coming in. At all last you know stupid behavior yet I love I love the fact you did the research for us Linda thank you so much Also I love Linda's Jodi Yes and it makes you listen put Jordi on then I'd really listen best accent in the war. Old I think this isn't Declan Joe You don't paint a very good picture of the London Underground really Declan That's strange to be honest I love travelling on the tube I agree that it can be a bleak experience during the rush hour Yes it's completely different it's the most official and fast way of travelling I totally agree coming back from the theatre and everything at night brilliant and I am grateful I'm not one of these people that has to do the rush hour every day because they do it they know what they're going into and I just feel so sorry for them he says I don't know anything about the kids voices but I can tell you that there is a really irritating platform conductor on the Victoria Line at Green Park he shouts over the Tannoy and drags his vowels to a very exaggerated level maybe t f l think it's cool no Declan they will have done it for the reason Linda said is that every voice that sounds different makes us listen it's the ones that become paper the leaders don't listen to it so that's why they're doing it they're giving us different kinds of voices to pull us up short. This is it from Brian he said Joe I did hear the kids voices I thought it was great we should enjoy the change Well no listen listen I will always embrace change and now I know why they're doing it I understand but at the same time I will say you can't understand a word the children are saying Bart not from the ones I heard but maybe some of them are bit clearer but she's absolutely right it makes you listen to all the future announcements because you think it's going to be a child or it's going to be an adult so it works I'd love to know what you think about writing on the tube in the rush hour and the amount of announcements and carry on it is a truly unique experience and one that I really don't want to go through again aren't I lucky that the moment I could just walk into work blue so if you want travelling in the rush hour is a massive have a sack on your back really the best. Shouldn't you just hold it by Yule song Don't you think because it graze the whole of my nose Morris is the minds of little and at least says Joe you have to have that now but I have a mini half a sack that's like a make up bag on my back Maurice in mind school to back a backpack. Morris's in Bermondsey Helen Morris I just hear and you say they've been gone for a couple of years on the airlines Given that will be your information on a lot. You know on your life jacket and things like that children you know you don't need a video like cry and yeah because years ago they used to the women used to call them and stewardess Yes yes but I know we shall film there yes but they've got like old kids sitting on the Priory the pilots are kids and the stewardess is kids and I show you how to do up yes I think I have seen that you'll write you know you'll write and it is very funny that you get your attention and it does get your attention and you're absolutely right and it's very similar it's one of those suites where they always have adults playing children which actually I don't think of that funny to be honest but I do think the airline one is very funny you're absolutely right and it does draw your attention on this is just a comment is that I couldn't understand what these children was saying and I was also at the at the time not in a very sort of Disney fun mood but I'm sure it's 3 o'clock in the afternoon when you hear them and you know you think gosh that's amusing. 11. Joe good in the off the news because how often in b.b.c. Radio London 10 minutes to 2 on the other side of the news we're going to be talking to a former children's laureate and the illustration of the book Mr on the bed is name is Chris riddle and he claims there are similarities between his 986 book which is called Mr on the bed and the John Lewis moles the months to add this year so if you all a fan of malls when I was in jail in Lewis are shot this I think that selling I think is a whole. Cave or something you can go in I don't know I'm just having a look I mean we were all discussing monsters actually and I was talking about one of my favorites has to be fungus the bogeyman but we could talk about monsters in children's books and how they are depicted but I'm very much looking forward to speaking to Chris Riddell he's going to be in a little bit later on so yesterday yesterday I was talking to Robert Elms at the top of the show about going to Canvey Island I had never been to Cambie island we were over there yesterday afternoon. And it's near Southend isn't it it's on the Essex coast which I don't know very well at all very flat so we were driving from Mars on the ice 13 and then we got there and write a who's directing the inside out piece he said I used to come here for 2 weeks in my school holidays as a kid and he said we'd stay in a caravan we think we found the caravan park my goodness I mean it is a real it's untouched it could be in like the 1950 s. Actually. And are central But you know these these seaside coastal small coastal seaside towns not the bore missile the brightness of the talkies but the smaller ones are really caught in a time warp and this lady that we're interviewing said that apparently the people that live in Canvey Island it's not an oil and I don't think we've crossed the bridge I think we did anyway they have 10 years added on to their life because of the air and I did notice things we were just driving down the 13 Chattaway And then when we got our I went this can breathe fresh air it's amazing air it seems to be far less polluted the name Brighton air and yeah this this lovely lady Linda that we were filming said Well it's been proved that I don't know how that there's a life. Expanse over. Improvement of 10 years because of where. So is it the air is it the lifestyle is it the pace of life I would love to know. It comes on the b.b.c. Essex is patched doesn't it but we listen people listen to us all over the world so . Any listening can be Island or people who've moved their oakum moved out of there or when they're on their holidays because as I say yesterday was the 1st Ahmad go and it's quite unique So give us a call 020742000. Going to that's funny that a sorry I'm going to Piper to Kate Bush everybody wants. Loves. To. Just. Ok Bush in December will be magic again let's go to Terry in Covent Garden Hello Terry allow drones or are we going very well thank you have to be quick Terry sorry they just hadn't the news but I could call it because I was saying Canvey Island they claim they have an extra 10 years of life to living in Canvey Island What do you think that's down to well what happened was a lot more. Holy harm on the Kurds hard yeah right there is where the terms makes America why Main Street where you are lovely fresh air blowing open on 3 dollars impression there is going to write it is very straight out of the North Sea which is a different direction to be breathing in Brighton than wooden arrows or the struggle for go through it that's where that's where the Serbs were met by meat and also the size of the pressure on you for clearing out somebody's roses said to me thank you by the way Terry Rose says Joe I remember you loved Julian Temple's Film London a Modern Babylon and you would enjoy seeing his one about Wilko Johnson and the band Dr Feelgood which is incredibly which is an incredible portrait also of Canvey Island because that's where Dr Feelgood came from his followup the ecstasy of Wilco Johnson is a phenomenal but also for all other reasons to feel good from Candy on thank you seaside towns a weird places you know what they throw out talent wise they really are and we could go into that guy made. Later on in the program to quote news on the way 1st of all b.b.c. Radio London travel with. Families close to a broken down car needs shift in that's what's causing the congestion back to town bridge approach and on the East India Dock Road and 25 very slow anticlockwise Sorry Kent borders anticlockwise 6 to 5 all ins have reopened but a broken down lorry needed shifting them for westbound slow a Brantford because of an earlier accident Victoria Street slow around the tourist station upgrade work going on nearby Of course West Cromwell Road westbound slow ols Court Road construction work and because Chelsea in bank is closed on the westbound Chelsea Bridge that causes problems for Grosvenor Road Chelsea Bridge Road and then Chelsea Embankment eastbound Billy Reid's b.b.c. Radio London travel more for me in half an hour. On digital radio and t.v. . $95.00 m. London is raising a station. B.b.c. Radio London. London's News a 2 o'clock I'm Greg McKenzie The driver of the tram which crashed to Croydon in south London a year ago killing 7 passengers and injuring dozens more probably dogs dogs for the whale accident investigators say he was travelling at more than 3 times the maximum speed limits as he approached a sharp bend they also criticize the operators saying they haven't put in sufficient safety measures to prevent trams from actually coming off the rails Well the leader of the commons and LEDs I'm told the Commons that lessons must be learned the whole country was horrified by what happened it was an absolute tragedy and I think we always send great condolences to the families and friends of all of those who died and it's absolutely right says the honorable lady says that we learned the lessons from that report detectives investigating the deaths of father and daughter Nahla and.