From in the room directly come in is probably a good thing from being nice a former nurse in Germany has admitted killing more or less 100 patients making him his country's most prolific serial killer since the war Neil's Hogle gave fatal doses of medicine to his victims he confessed at the start of his trial in the northern city of Oldenburg and Jenny Hill reports from both Bill and his patients trusted him with their lives and Neil's Hagel was a serial killer who preyed on the elderly and infirm the 41 year old had ministered fatal doses of medication to the people in his care at 2 hospitals in northern Germany his apparent motive to impress his colleagues by attempting to resuscitate the very patients he'd attacked her girls already serving a life sentence in connection with the deaths of 6 people it was only after investigators exams the remains of others that the true extent of his crimes came to light. The Metropolitan Police are searching the garden of a house in Sutton Coldfield in the West Midlands in connection with the disappearance of Susie lump you in 1906 there's been no trace of the estate agent since she went to meet a client at Fullam in west London the house belonged to the mother of the prime suspect John Cannon who was never prosecuted and denies committing the murder Jim Dickey who led the police investigation into Suzy lump use murder between 200-2006 gave his reaction to developments interesting obviously I would say that police have received new intelligence or evidence that's led them to do the search at this time those premises sounds as if it's going to be quite extensive I would imagine they would have so much hype to look beneath the ground. Figures over the past 5 years show that people across Sheffield were left with full rubbish bins over 33 and a half 1000 times it's been revealed following a Freedom of Information request the number of missed been collections has also been rapidly rising between April 20142017. There's something called a culture crawl taking place in Doncaster tonight a group of 8 people in the town say they want to change the perception of Doncaster by showcasing its cultural highlights Jenny Els reports from Doncaster. It's just behind me at the art college where the cultural crawl will be kicking off from 5 pm tonight so what exactly is a call to crawl Rachel home from Dunk volatile Mike is here to explain a call is a free night out for local residents created by. Businesses working together by the council as well chance to come out experience the town in a new way and check out the news. And just have a completely different now than what usually have been done Custer volunteered out in the mill of this with me where will it go over kicking off a church view for just by the minister will be a stall still draw an exhibition and just go for no as you please fantastic So if you fancy a dose of Johnny culture why not get your stump on round the town center tonight this is Jenny Els for B.B.C. Radio Sheffield in Doncaster. In sport chesterfield or not shouldn't tonight in the National League certain United 17 year old Levi a munchie will make his full debut just weeks after signing a 1st professional contract on an ice hockey there's been one signing and one departure at the Sheffield stalest today they have signed import goalie Mark Kleiman from Austrian side Innsbrook Meanwhile coach Tom Barrasso has released defend defenseman Yuri following the arrival of Ben O'Connor B.B.C. Radio Sheffield news and sport it's 4 minutes past one of the 5 day weather forecast on B.B.C. Radio Shack Lisa a fair amount of cloud across South Yorkshire through this afternoon with some bright spells but also risk of a scattering of showers a moderate northerly wind and temperature has around 8 or 9 degrees that's 48 found heights and the showers will fade away the saving the my stars drying clear of risk a few showers late in the night and a widespread ground frost as temperatures drop to one or 2 degrees a bright day tomorrow with sunny spells and for most it will be dry but there is a risk of a few showers and milder with a southerly wind 9 or 10 degrees a cloudy starts to the day on Thursday with outbreaks of rain clearing it will brighten up later in the day and temperatures around 9 degrees a cold start the day on Friday with drying find plenty of sunshine then turns wet and windy a nice into Saturday gales possible on Saturday milder 13 or 14 degrees as more weather online at B.B.C. . Sheffield. Ronnie Robinson on B.B.C. Radio Sheffield. We've got today the SAS Server programme. Is going to be talking about disasters with people from the universe that are going to look at disaster films or should say. The Day the Earth go for. Tearing inferno. That rock bottom. Interest there. Let's. See. If she. The truth so you know we are talking about a disaster today that South a movie particularly those disaster and science fiction films that imagine the end of the world how true to life all that is the world going to end there's an event in Sheffield this week asking that very question and Bryony cultural and Alexander's study microbes Sheffield Hallam University they're involved and they've joined the briny you're exploring what the science behind sign 5 Hi yeah and say I'm by any Ph D. In chemistry biology. And we are looking at how to. The public engaged with science and how it effects science fiction not enough is known about the weird and wonderful things that happen in science fiction and we want to show the public you know how we work out diseases what kind of plagues could affect them what makes a robot tick could you ask that part happen that kind of thing sounds great and you got the chance not only are some people listening we can say with your actual sessions on Friday yes it's on Friday at 730 and till 10 in the evening but tonight is out only because it spoke a it's partially speaking but also you know the majority of science that we do you may see universities is funded by the taxpayer and we just want to show the taxpayer adults anyone. What kind of science we're doing we think it's important to keep I don't think gauged and given the opportunity to learn the science that they might not done since school good Alex is hillocks Andrews are you into a cipher yourself or lecture Yeah I think I've always been a bit into saw foreign For me science is sort of the embodiment of it I mean you know right from being in primary school where they got pale and onion and you can have a look at unions can down the marker scope and there you can physically see them and then what we do now is is basically the important of what you see on the T.V. So the basis behind sort of programs like Star Trek where previously you had these hand held computers and now people got someone with them day to day I mean we're more focused on bacteria microbes and how they contribute to disease but the big picture science science fiction for me to go hunting How can you do this in real life not when you're performing in front of people on a Friday night your interest in the real microbes Yes we're both actual scientists but I work with microbes. I'm involved in in whether the bacteria that grow in your mouth whether or not they can cause heart attacks. Yeah I work on. Catheters and preventing bacterial infections like when you go into hospital and you categorize So how can you prevent bacteria infecting a body in that way what people think when you turn a proposal and say what you do for coming to pass the day so a lot of time I get your hands. Well more than that sort of a face pulling I gave you your research into catheters This is why I think a lot of people say see it the importance I think when you can say you know if you go into hospital you know something like 7 percent of you who get half tries will end up with a hospital infection from that catheter that's a huge number of people who are ill who are then going to be made more ill bacterial infection and how can we treat that how can we stop that happening that's the be. All going to enjoy this conversation this afternoon you're interested in microbes I think we better share what we know about what is a microburst poses the 1st thing you know so when you're born you're born essentially sterile and you acquire your microbes from the environment you live in so I mean technically somebody born in Sheffield would a different microbial composition of someone say born in bones like to be very subtle but you could detect it and the mark robes inhabit every aspect of you and for the most part it's symbiotic relationship which means that you need those microbes as much as they need you to help you digest they protect you from infection and there's a small amount of these microbes which you would know as viruses funguses and bacteria and this small percentage of these microbes can cause infections so you know if you have an outbreak or so something like a bacteria that causes a certain disease and that starts to grow multiply that's when you start to get a well similarly with a virus you catch a virus from another person so this virus needs a host and something like the flu so if somebody sneezes and you breathe in those droplets that contain the virus that's how you get where my microbes at the moment all I think microbes is synonymous with the word germs not germs sound bad. Everywhere it just means a small. A small living thing you can't see with the naked eye you can see it under my eyes your microscope they don't like are they got legs some day yes some bacteria can have what we call it we call flagella Pillai and that is a little like the way they are you doing Hello I'm a forest Yeah sorry I'm waving my noise around on the radio it works perfectly we'd they like yes fungus I mean you would know from guys as mushrooms like Alex that that they don't look like tiny little mushroom. That essentially a mushroom is a big form of a fungus I say they are visible to us in the larger form how many of our got on the 6 foot right here millions 1000000 so there's a lot of crawling around now you deserve them more like they more they more of a bit more wiggle you can make you feel a bit gross because I was so sore because I worked with all microbes by the time you finished brushing your teeth and you put that toothbrush back in the pot on the top of your sink those microbes are already real how between your teeth but they protect you they protect you so they inhabit all of your skin you teeth inside our Ferber. This is it is there in your gut seen a when you have antibiotics and they say oh it could cause you to have like an upset tummy that she has you got a lot of microbes in your stomach that help your digestion so if you wipe them all out with antibiotics it can cause you to actually have an upset stomach rather than microbes that I mean your stomach actually help you digest food so it's pretty disasters on the program today every day as you know we have a different theme this isn't the 1st time we've had disaster but this is disaster as a theme. Cultural and on the raid. We're discussing an event that's coming up about the end of the world this Friday which is why we discussing it now right Brian and Alex let's come to it we want to know about the end of the world which I think is caused by microbes So imagine there's a there's a big outbreak of some sort of space plague bacteria you know what it actually and Life As We Know It. We've had these things before so there's the plague that most people know about. You know further back in time but Granny will tell you yes say in Madagascar in 2040 there was a people Nick play outbreak it's killed only nearly 40 people see that he lives there people think that the plague is hundreds of years ago and the Black Death and things but it's still current today but the difference being between what we had for the initial outbreak of the Black Death is that people thought it was caused by bad smells and they'd wear masks with sweet smelling things up their noses to try and prevent it whereas what we know now through through science and research is that we understand the disease and there are things in place like could like these quarantines that you see on the T.V. To prevent the spread of disease and also we understand it when it's done how to treat it and we understand how it behaves so you can sort of limit the damage you know the W.H.O. So the World Health Organization governments around the world have measures in place for any pandemic so any outbreaks and I'm sure that they're full of lots of different things I know each individual Council has to have emergency sort of procedure for if there was an outbreak of flu even and how would they cope with hospitals things I hear you mention Bubonic Plague just tell us what bubonic is and while you're at it what's a pandemic right scientific today using terms of no idea what they were forgotten about so that sort of plagues like a bit of a general terminology about a disease that spread through markets on the rats. That basically results in these big horrible stools here at. The end of dinner and a very slow and painful death where they would lock you in a house and painted a black X on a door. What we're talking about with you know science fiction and plagues it could literally mean anything back Tyria things that you see in film and T.V. All the time. And you know. And asked. Royd carrying a bacteria that lands on this earth could kill you you know could it kill everybody mostly answered the likelihood is that we've evolved alongside bacteria so it's almost like an arms race the bacteria evolves a bit and you evolve to fight it and that race has been going on for millions of years so if a bacteria arrived on an asteroid it probably just shrivel because if a real true yes. Can you expect of me yeah if you're watching you know yes they are her and her holding hands your hands are cold you're not going but if I was colonized we'd say we've all heard of M.R.S.A. Yeah still say that yes or yes and the M.R. Means it's Methicillin resistant so staff or is actually found on something like a 3rd of what people carry on their skin a few people might carry a method Selim resistant strain so if I carried the methicillin resistant was a very well know one in 3 asked afterwards which can live quite happily with a smaller percentage much smaller antibiotic resistant you could pass on to somebody and they could live with it very happily on their skin and be absolutely fine you know if you got cut or something or graze if the bacteria got into that graze your sort of compromise that. I'm getting spooky message from Swifty ask this question What do you guess think about the rise in allergies or claim which we live in today with our use of disinfectants killings Swifty good books Good question yeah is a really good question and it is an important problem I think actually Alex's research kind of touches on this a little bit about microbes in your mouth in the here so there's a big difference between allergies and you know super clean so things like cleaning products that claim to kill 99.9 percent of bacteria and you need those bacteria like you said you need as much as they need you so when you live in the in an altered clean environment and you're protected from certain certain things you sort of are conditioned and you see this regularly with babies so when babies are born like I said this they're not gotten there so they acquire them almost instantly from their surrounded environment and what you see if you've ever lived with babies they get like little blemishes on the skin and these resigned what this is is this is your body can use some of those microbes so the microbes that 1st. The body panics and things or we shouldn't have this this shouldn't be here so it almost starts to attack and fight off the infection but then it realizes actually we could all get along here and we could all be happy families so then that that then resigns and now as a grown adult you have a microbial system that benefits you so it's personal to you and it's that the almost the 1st level of protection against what we call a pathogen or a disease area yeah I think you just know that if you're not exposed to these things you won't be able to build up resistance to them so in my personal opinion is good for kids think outside and roll in mud because the more you are exposed to the more your body gets to experience you know it's almost like with the flu vaccine you give people a little little bit and then their bodies able to fight against that virus strain by exposing adult thing kids to different things in the environment the body like you said will be aware of it they'll know what those. Bacteria or viruses are I think living in not just our environment can actually be quite poor to your health Great thanks so much rich the question there and this question from an Day Can I ask are we better equipped if we've been exposed to bacteria as kids as opposed to the kids bedroom watching T.V. Instead of making mud pies and generally getting school feeling dirty that sun this question you've answered yet you've used the same image of playing in the mud Well I mean we've all been the one kid I know I've personally dropped a sweet in a puddle and then eaten it listening but I'm getting Morial I'm not sure there is no definitive evidence of C. We'd have to study children living in an sterile environment 1st children living in a muddy one so it's very hard to say definitively but just logic if you're exposed to it you can vote resistance to it and you should hopefully be healthier I want to ask you about what until things that people freak out about. Let's talk about love a tree is all. It's covered with microbes and what should we do about it yes yes so you love it you see it's covered with microbes and the thing is that there are specific So they're all over but the problem is there's only so microbes that can exist on a toilet so you so there's no food on a toilet seat unless you particularly you're eating crisps at the same time as visiting the lavatory Oh I see. Some evidence that people still are in their lungs is there we think this is a great radio station all of a lot of anymore but it's the same as it is you know the microbes that live on your kitchen side so you know how do you how do you protect yourself every day what do you wash your hands more I suppose is the question but there are some people watch lands every 5 minutes do a show until I no I don't only when I've been working with bacteria in the lab I wash them before I leave the lab but I think it's important to know that there's so many microbes out there but only a small subset of them are dangerous and all safe microbes to be able to live in a large number almost like Alex that they need food by that I mean they need nutrients and Mino acids and sugars to sort of grow and proliferate to get larger in number otherwise it's just quite a low level that lives naturally on the environment on surfaces that's are just existing They're here now yeah. I think it's the same with chemicals so people say you know that's a bad chemical well water is actually a chemical we have a safety for water it says if you get water in your eyes wash eyes out with water. You have to have a safety she said thank you ever so much I'm going to ask everybody this so unless you give me your famous to your most popular or the disaster film you'd like to add to our list what about the tell it for me it's got me on the Get in the Christmas classic of Armageddon. What more could you ask for apart from an alien invasion and . My mind also. I'm sure you know that you know for today I did. But I would say the last film I watch is contagion Yeah it is a brilliant it's about a pandemic and the W.H.Y. In the C.D.C. And it's a really really good film you're saying there is who can tell what about Armageddon What's that story so Armageddon. It's about an alien invasion that basically threatens the human race will smith punches an alien in the face. What more could you ask that's wonderful you know I'm an independent and. You've done it on here thank you very much indeed it's B.B.C. Radio Sheffield and we've been discussing horror things will be of a wonderful time. Case this Friday. This is where till 10 pm at the Millennium galleries right thank you very much indeed B.B.C. Radio Sheffield no disaster so far this got a bit close once or twice. Use for self healing and snores Darvish to give us your favorite This last a film or disaster for I don't do disaster problems are more of our own command myself I asked that met that our stuff for good will actually very wrong come. More Joy It's chilly here. Give us some travel news then I will do yes in Sheffield the 61 Chesterfield road still fairly busy at the Wall Street junction also the 61 bit old as well very slow at the moment past the spire business part roundabout again at only heading into town of around 5 to 10 minutes here is 616 a Tankersley also look in every episode at Hunters bar in Sheffield continue to queue Brocklebank Israel in a Doncaster busy and slow moving head west into the mushroom roundabout this afternoon if you spot a problem covered. One of them 814-256-1212 more in fact a minute this is B.B.C. Radio Sheffield with a news headline. Thank you only to reason May's denying that yesterday's budget was a preparation for a possible general election the budget included more money for health and an unexpected increase in personal tax allowances it's been suggested the measures might have been designed with a snap election in mind the Metropolitan Police are searching the garden of a house in certain Coldfield in connection with the disappearance of Suzy lump you in 1906 the house belonged to the mother of the prime suspect John Cannon who was never prosecuted and denies committing the murder the Conservative M.P. For Northeast has described how his mother's battle with ovarian cancer has made him to turn in to improve treatment for the disease Leigh Rowley was speaking to fellow M.P.'s at the opening of a special debate on the subject in Parliament. Police in South Yorkshire are to be issued with guards the mesh hoods used to stop prisoners spitting officers have attracted controversy nationally with the Metropolitan Police Force deciding against the use of a concerns they could provoke further violence against officers on the weather rather cloudy this afternoon with some brighter periods and a few scattered showers maximum temperature 8 degrees Celsius B.B.C. Radio Sheffield news Richard thanks very much indeed would you give me a disaster film to add to the list of disasters of the afternoon I can well I don't know if it's a disaster if it was certainly a disaster for the crew on board the space ship but alien is a fantastic film which I watch many times over the thank you the 1st Alien film but put it on ice thanks very much in the. Radiation field 14949. Feel. The free. Trade deal proceed. Forward. In disaster films on the program today a favorite disaster firm from Facebook you can do it there of course to me Andrew says airplane it's a spoof disaster for much of a few mentions already and Jim's come up with a night to remember Yeah thank you your favorite disaster films we're talking about disasters on the program in a moment we're going to talk about what happened to him it's been mentioned already that was it is just the sort of form it. Was if you stayed in aim. I think the vicar sent his children away I'm going to ask. Them. Jagger song into town big music on B.B.C. Radio shuffle Senate today we're having a right laugh we're also talking about disaster is to disaster is the theme of the day and I'm inviting you to share with me the disaster film that you really like to say why we have a question from the Moby clown but I am afraid I've lost the 2 university people who were with me a little earlier on if they could have answered this they might be on listing on the radio so they might tell us why is it 99 percent bacteria and not 100 percent well that's the question I don't know the answer I'm not sure I understand the question but thank you we're talking about disasters inspired by that event taking place on Friday at the Millennium galleries in Sheffield where one of the things they're looking for that the end of the world scenarios that you get in big budget hole. They would films plagues and germ warfare and all that stuff looking at the science behind science fiction there is a real example of a plague of course not very far from us here in South Yorkshire and north and Bindon lives in she's volunteered at a museum there she joins us now Annette the town of the village of is associated with the plague. Well in 1665 there was not break of play. It originated from. London when a bale of cloth or clothes was sent to the village to be worked on by a tailor this thing tailor. Unbeknownst to him at the time it contained. The flea which had been infected with the plague bacteria and not very long after his arrival in the village and the arrival of the cloth he's the come to the bubonic plague. He wouldn't have known that there were fleas in the cloth he put the cloth before the fire to dry out it was all the damp of speech journey so I think they say it's about a 6 day incubate period and so he was the 1st person to die. And then after about a couple of weeks. A child who lived in the house where he was lodging also succumb to to the plate and dies and from that that particular house is spread out through the village and you know 14 months later 260 people had in fact died tarnishing or the population that time that well it's thought there would have been. Around that 8900 Pico the village it was recorded in the 18th century it was 360 but I think it felt that that was the number of houses that time so population of 800 or $900.00 S. a Quarter of the people generally held that in epidemics of disease that about a 3rd of the population will succumb to that so that would figure you were in the street to play about the mule chauffeur and you Yes Well. Nick you write to who lives in the village. Produces she produces the pantomime but she's twice produced a play called the roses of Eamonn it was written in 1970 by Don Taylor. Was performed in the street using axes from the village there were about 60 people. And the action moved through the street to the various houses which are all OK The actual houses Yeah yeah. And it was a very moving play and also being part of it the significance of the event is really highlighted that yeah it was it was great it was a bit of the baseline kind of came back to me just thinking about to get not if you will play but of the whole story there's a rector of the name of a charisma who plays a part in the story. Well that there were 2 actually it was a difficult period of history in terms of the church and religion during the Civil War and for 20 years previously the village had been. A Puritan village and the rector Thomas Stanley was a Puritan but in 1662 he he was effective from the church because of the restoration of the trunk line in a law and then in 164664 William mom passed on took up his post so he'd been in post a year you know and then suddenly here we all with the plague so it was a very difficult time for him not only having to tend to a population who were stricken with this deadly disease but also probably facing a degree of challenge from the relationship situation you know because Thomas Stanley remained in the village right trim I look as if it was he was the coal. I think in a way well I'm not. Talking about Thomas Dudley but I'm just wondering about the college short of civil war that was taking place in the village but I'm sure what I do want to ask is that isn't the bottle the legend maybe it's history that the people of the decided not to go and spread the plague right now I mean the thing is that the plague arrived in September 16th 65 and it was a fairly. Well in the 1st 9 months about 60 people died so there was quite a significant number but it appeared by May of 60 and 66 to have begun to die out and in fact there were only 2 deaths in May 16th $66.00 and then in the June the numbers began to escalate again and it was at that point that we must pass on no doubt with the support of Thomastown they just a plan for the village and they closed the church because they were aware that you know being in proximity could spread the disease they they requested that people didn't bury their loved ones in the church yard they had to bury them in the fields and gardens wherever they could but the 3rd thing was to put a sort of a I suppose it's referred to often as a court on Sunday around the village so an imaginary line around the village and the villagers were expected to stay within that. That boundary and the Earl of Devon share. I believe arrange for food to be left that various sites around the village so that food could be exchanged for money. So that So from that point people weren't able to travel out but I mean people would have been very poor anyway and you have to ask the question where would they have gone there were people who left. The village no doubt those that got the money today said but but. As it happens you know the remaining population stayed they responded to the call ready of the month a song and they got Thomas Stanley is well and he died and they missed being. Very scared very frightened by the prospect because they would see their friends their families their neighbors dying and and of course we know that by the. From June to the last recorded deaths beginning of November there were almost 20200 deaths and whole families were wiped out so it is a real tragic tragic it's an extraordinary stories and you tanks for telling it didn't share it with us again and there have been films made about because we told my disaster films in particular on the program today has it been filmed when it's been you simply filmed it in the village you know play itself yeah but there's been a play at the Globe Theater actually just finished its written which was written by a local. Lad called Matt Hawley says quite a lot of people went through that but. I think there have been a couple of short films done but not really widely distributed but it would make a very good disaster. Below people listening and going to do that thanks ever so much for joining us and have been on B.B.C. Radio Shack and then of course you're going to do whatever no should say and give me a particular disaster movie that you have seen that's really been made which would be for you the most difficult one that I can to avoid a circus a film silence with a fluffy films but I'll give you a little bit to make you well here's a go watching from the edge of my seat towering in said. It was a long time ago that but to. The time I was very gripping the face frightening bits of course films of going to play not sure I think when they happen it's been many. So many times already on this program what happens in tearing inferno Well I guess you know when I think it went south when I yeah it was a tower block disaster and I think most of the film I mean it was a long time a car in the details and I probably wouldn't want you to get but I think it was the whole scenario of the firefighters trying to get people out we've seen it a real life yeah and I thank you very much indeed and been there from the museum She's there at the moment disaster movies is what we're collecting on the program she mentioned Towering Inferno turning Facebook to mention tearing inferno as well Pauline got into truth on the beach I remember on the beach as an end of the world . Story about nuclear disasters 9959 polling says American poster a little book take science fiction drama with Ava Gardner Fred Astaire and Tony Perkins on the beach more sure disaster movie we'll share it with us on disastrous B.B.C. Radio chef and his Madonna with ghost town yaf cars. Mamie Put on or in a ghost town ghost town a very appropriate song for what we're going to talk about next year we're discussing on the program today disaster film some of them make you laugh some of them certainly don't and one of them that I don't think had many laughs in it was very important to me Star was a film written by Barry Hines which was all about well Nina is in most Menino what was threads. And it was a disaster they send in Sheffield It was a new play when the nuclear bomb dropped and all these got no you were in the film or what did you do. It was covered in the boat down the Infirmary Hospital. And we had to line somebody else then we could feel it is really tough always took to the door and talk to go. Wherever the security guards had phone and we would walk in the cages they. Why it's fine with us because you're almost beside. What did you would presume you saw the finished film in 19 Eighty-Four yourself now. What do you owe on the cutting floor it took about a week and a half to a I think I've got probably about 5 minutes on screen that's good what do you think what do you think of the film when you saw it. Well it may joints I think it may Jones to stockpile you want people dead it was quite frightening. It was really quiet for but the technical effects in its time in 19 Eighty-Four. We have to roll possible with the mole and that was that we just had to walk from one place to the overall. And. a then when it was school it was all on how it got senator schumer just toll to fall like such a very a fed ex was was amazing in for it's time to d. a Me what we've been talking about disaster movie some of which are over cement to put you to laugh or till the worms which usually end with a bitch of hope my memory of watching that film i only saw the final version i'm not in it was at there was no hope in it's a troll no no because she a meek meakin a think it were all an gay students restate in stale but cowering don't pregnant then she gave to the think the baby was just despicable number yeah same in the is it was really it was very sorry plate all they was survive a sort of on the moles only was just a livin of ralston a living off but nothing was grow with and it was real all it was in it was ok with the with do just as of all to m.l. Yeah do you think it would be worst watch an again naina i have i wash dicks i watched a to get worship comeback on the t. Great to chemist i will i did get with the daily a probably about 15 years ago saying this was no 8384 as a rim yeah i think 84 from my her yeah i and i think casts or to god take pup of alone a aly to sign was sense just to say oh no you know i'm forever changed a bit like fester any worse day was just nice borat it to members a family in the don't know where it is now sort of thank class think you'd to be on the pace the myrow yeah a water of on show the to click you have a show much nina for She starred in the film threads Barry Hines's end of the world drama which was on the telly not in 84 it was followed up a thing called the war game which I think the B.B.C. Never showed about disaster a brilliant film the body Hunston used not bad to put it mildly but there's not much hope in it Nina thank you well shopping stories about disaster movies and all the mention of the beach with Gregory Peck and so forth from the bestselling novel says the tax to buy Nevels shoot of course it was so that's another one that's just come in and dismisses day after tomorrow it's this is car race where the weather pattern gets messed up by a rapid warming of the Seas which plummets the earth into a series of extreme weather events most of the northern and southern hemisphere is freezing over. Your favorite disaster movie. I think. It. Just shocked to see clearly now we're talking about disaster for the I've just been told and to my producer Rob he's got a disaster for me when that changed his life didn't you. And I believe you talking to me now. Actually the movie will move the slower boat yeah I my favorite disaster film is The Day After Tomorrow which has been mentioned already and. My best friend so. It wasn't so much of a disaster for me and did you hold hands during the disaster that followed. Yeah I think he did he's gun shy we've had several more of these I'd like to hear from Johnny Healey Green got in church to say did you know the tower in tearing Inferno was actually in Paris now I know there and day after tomorrow which is the mention from Carver that under the weather pattern that messed up and they see tries and and we don't for I'm collecting from you please your D. Sastre movie we're adding to our list and frightening selves to death you're on B.B.C. Radio show for where we know how to do it. Travel News for South Yorkshire and North Darvish is Greg thanks for only the M one northbound a junction $35.00 a thought. By a broken down vehicle so far traffic is coping well it's on the 4 lanes strange there are no problems on the a meeting or the round Sheffield in the city center quite busy M. Places particularly on Queen's Road down some heavy traffic on about Hanover Street but overall it's on the move the fountain about to end Chesterfield chance with road on the inbound side is looking quite busy and plenty of heavy traffic around on Caster as well particularly weak the whole road and going out overseeing Georgie's bridge if you can update us on any of that do call then on the Jam Dodger line a double 142561212 more in half an hour castings is Yorkshire Darvish day this is B.B.C. Radio Sheffield. News. Thank you Ronnie M.P.'s have resumed debate on the budget with Labor dismissing the government's claim that austerity is coming to an end the chancellor Philip Hammond announced billions of pounds of extra spending mostly for the N.H.S. Along with tax cuts for lower and high earners but his labor Labour's shadow John McDonald told the Commons that many people wouldn't be better off even with yesterday's budget. Of the welfare benefit cuts planned by the government will still. Rollout outside of the N.H.S. The park mental budgets are flat and the Resolution Foundation this morning revealed that some departments face a further 3 percent cut in their budgets by 2023 Richard.