And holding out for a hero. On this Wednesday morning. We'll take you through the. Day today and a little bit warmer tomorrow. When this turn around again coming up on the program . Today in about half an hour's time this fella alone Ben Fogle here in the Sahara Desert from the Sahara to Brighton go for an all shot on his new speaking tour he'll tell us more about that later and also on the show before 11 the director of this movie. Music better care of yourself. Has traveled. And. I reckon this movie has got something about its Rennie's playing Judy Garland's the film is called Judy is out on Friday gold is going to tell us about the movie he's made I think it focuses on events 50 years ago in 1969 when she came to perform in London so we'll find out more from gold about Judy before 11 but after 12 they brought north of Peter James with his new book it's not a Roy Grace novel this time around it's a chiller the secret of cold hill and the ghostly goings on cold will continue so Peter is with us later the other thing we're doing today is catching up with more former Thomas Cook employees including many from Sussex and sorry who are staging a protest in London this morning in about an hour's time around 250 members of staff will March in full uniform for Westminster underground station to Downing Street they're calling for an investigation into how the company was allowed to collapse yesterday it should have been payday or rather Monday but instead these former Thomas Cook employees were protesting outside the Conservative Party conference in Manchester. Sorry and ne Hampshire this is b.b.c. Story. I don't think they're directors at summer's Kaka concerned about how they're going to feed the kids this week and next week and the week after I think they've already taken care of that and laughters to pick up the basics for the 1st time in my thirty's since I've left school I'm actually unemployed never been in a situation before in my life but constantly. Trying to sort out tell you why when . We don't understand it we've never had been in this situation with not receiving our pay our banks today were never in for a fact all of our bills and he's going out tomorrow yeah panic also on the program yesterday we spoke to Rachel Morel Rachel was a cabin manager for Thomas Cook working out of Gatwick and she staging her own one woman protest and marching from Devon to Downing Street and I spoke to her as she approached Saulsbury I think the managing director will be held accountable and maybe those you touched millions of parents need to think about in a moment the right thing hunting them back to sons and it being shared throughout the 20000 employees your job you haven't got any money coming into the bank but you all can struggle financially you know there's so many more worries not you know it's a victory for the economy it is affecting us today it's really tough time but I'm doing what I can to raise awareness I wake me if you missed racing on Wednesday but I wish my colleagues best of luck in London but I'm going to do my own chemistry and frankly work and why if you talk to family believe the money through health come accounts both on everything and we'll catch up with Rachel later in the wake Let's go live to London now i Reporter Simon Jenkins is there whereabouts you have done a good morning I'm just at the bridge next to Westminster the mother of all parliaments of the cruelest irony of all for Thomas Cook employers for employees is that the very thing they were taking many people to every year on their holiday the sunshine Well there is resplendent here in London this morning Churchill still looks rather grim and moody on top of his plane but the place is absolutely packed with people there's the breakfast flags there's the European Union flags we've seen them for the last few months and years actually but if you look around there are people from every conceivable area of the globe here I've already on our. But for the man she helps a couple of Chinese tourists with directions morning and here in about half an hour's time the Thomas Cook employees those who have lost their jobs will be meeting after the subway station where I am and that we marching and that's saying to politicians of every color help us you must help us. And is the help they need immediately financial as we've heard him in many cases can answer is that they haven't been paid for the 3 weeks' work they did up until late September and of course last week there was no work for them. Yeah absolutely is very real I mean today this morning the bank accounts of them was not being added to they should be in paid on Monday I don't know about usually but I have my direct debits all over nice to come out after I've been paid the very fact that no money's gone in and also that I look like they could be at the bottom of the pecking order for getting anything for the company which is why they're doing their bank the politicians you have to act this is an established company which as far as they knew was having full flights lots of happy customers and they say it was just the biggest shock of ever and also one of the things I think really would have made someone like church or proud of the staring at me here this morning is the way the employee carried on even knowing they're not going to get by by carried on helping their customers so it remains to be seen if today's demonstration of protests will get them any help from the government Obama Titian's or return Simon thank you come back to later someone Jenkins there in Westminster Well help may not be forthcoming from the government but there are those around who want to do what they can to help form a Thomas Cook staff Brighton based company accelerates learning and development is offering its services for free Karen Lippitt joins we have a Karen good morning Tony hi what how can you help form a Thomas Cook work as well and we've quite involved with this because one of our directors is was for many years having cruise with Thomas Cook and I My background is in the travel industry so we felt we had to do something to help so we're holding a series of workshops the 1st one is on Friday this week and we are going to offer any terms cooked for employees advice about writing a c.v. Interview techniques and perhaps even sort of trying to be trying to do something different because obviously that is a tough workplace out there and there aren't going to be that many jobs available for the cabin crew for example so we want to try and help them to perhaps find a change of direction you know talking to some former employees last week. And some of them have worked for the company for sort 102030 years and weren't expecting to have to update their c.v. In their mid fifty's for instance Exactly and that's where we really feel we uniquely placed to help them and we've been blown away by the local support we've had from businesses for example mushy giving lunch to have one on Friday the run to get runs if the casino is giving us a venue everyone's behind them the mayor's office we're all there and I think that's important they know that they're not on their own and we'll do whatever we can to help them I mean there are media precarious financial situation is one thing that you know it's and it's not down to you to help but this is about finding future work that's going to take a little bit of time so getting that next paycheck for a lot of former workers will be some time coming it must be a real worry to them absolutely and I think as you know your last contributor said you know they're going to be quite a long way down the pecking order but at least if they feel they're doing something and they're not just sitting around you know because it must be really frustrating and so at least with the workshops we can help possibly put them in the right direction I spoke to one lady last week who'd worked in a series of the Thomas Cook shops across West Sussex and she said look you know I'm a single mom my teenage son I think living at home still I got to do something and actually she went out and pounded the streets and got herself a job last week so that that's good news isn't it absolutely. But also people who work Thomas Cook have really good personal skills lots of them I'm sure because their customer facing that much of the time that's absolutely right and that's why we think accelerate we can help them because we can perhaps point in into different directions that they may not thought about they have got all sorts of skills cabin crew for goodness say I couldn't do that job and they probably can do all sorts of things that they haven't thought about so Excel or we can point them in the right direction and hopefully you know help them a little bit on the new career path What are some of the challenges that people who find themselves in a position like that or needing to change jobs face because I mean this is a kind of personal. Not back it seems to me that the employees are take that job very personally and that's a massive not back for them as individuals that overcome that as well as kind of get in the gumption to go out there and get another job I think that's right and I think the other thing that's happening with Thomas Cook is as an element of shock involved it's almost like a death you know a lot of these people have worked for that company for many many years and now suddenly fund selves out of work obviously that's the financial implications but yes it's going to be a huge not to that confidence too and that's where I think we can really help them we have got some places left to Friday if anyone is still interested and he Thomas Cook and former employees we've got a couple of places left for Friday they'll get a good lunch from the following week Davy focusing No we've certainly got some places left supplying nice lunch for them that too so how do we find charge how do we put our hands up and say yeah. You can contact me Karen accelerate. And we can give you a new website if Karen thank you very much that's accelerate with an 8 at the end no I absolutely Ok thanks Karen. Thank you very much for coming on pleasure to see from accelerate learning and development if your former Thomas Cook staff we know somebody who is then point them in their direction maybe that will help certainly shows that other people are thinking of you as well such good 1020 Now this is Mary her beautiful self. Which means the song has ended and the thing that was 1st play next has not happened so let's move on 1023 on b.b.c. Sussex and b.b.c. Sorry Danny pikey So that's very interesting if you are a former Thomas Cook employee or you know somebody who is maybe Karen's company can help you out accelerate so it's like accelerate but with a figure right at the end he said the letters how in those workshops for former employees free of charge just to help you out because Karen used to work in the travel business so that's nice of her I got some football news now and former Bryant have Albion manager Alan Murray says the seagulls just need a bit of luck to get their season back on track grandpas a side haven't won since the opening day of the season but speaking on the Albion unlimited podcast Mallory says he's enjoyed the season so far it's impressive fresh bicycling we haven't knocked anybody over we've seen some very good football excellent results for it I'll play the car so last Saturday I didn't score. That will be a problem for the season scoring goals and that's what you could do in the Premier a quality player there are saying this has been really exciting and really enjoyed have come away from the ground in a very happy where 2 was in the last. Chairmanship yet I mean that balance between style and results is always tricky as a manager you must have experienced even then in your day when you are you know in charge of clubs you know getting that balance right is very difficult absolutely I mean we go back to just before I left we had 4 going to go. For price. And we had to break Sunderland Sunderland a low people scored a go Gary Williams what he was doing 10 yards from go I don't know as usual left back to the specialist ball in the back and. And we won one nil in front of 45000. People that were watching the game I mean it's you can never count on everything happening with your team you hope. But you can't count you know when somebody gets a chance to score a goal and he misses it you know start thinking it been a teacher in a really needed it I mean players look at that when you're on the pitch you know was a chance mischief we don't know why in the back but there's a chance missed we've got to keep going and mindset comes into the game fitness level forget it everybody is extremely fit mind games play with young people myself what you say. You don't think you don't know all watched should happen and blah blah blah blah blah I mean I've been the best manager ever but of the ever managed to many 20. That's the thing about the top level now in the Premiership must be extremely difficult. To manage to. Make them successful and then the money comes into it doesn't. Know much but you know very pleasantly surprised at some of what was played as a form of pride of RB manager Alan Murray talking to Johnny Cantor on the Albion unlimited pod cast you can download that now via the b.b.c. Sound that on that you'll also hear Alan talk about his time as a player at this weekend's opponents Tottenham Hotspur and under normal circumstances that 1230 kick off on Saturday for the Albion at home at the Amex welcoming Spurs you would think probably Spurs for that one wouldn't you if you look at sort of cold hard terms but following last night in the champions they were 72 against Spurs yesterday wow something like the biggest defeats for a pretty side in the Champions League at home 7 to. So. Is their confidence shot to bits or are they going to prove a point on Saturday which once you think it's going to be well we will find out with Johnny cancer and Warren Aspinall midday for b.b.c. Sussex sports this coming Saturday for the RB and the Spurs. Love that song Sam Smith and no money and dancing with a stranger come up after 11 Today's link 11 some lovely songs in there for you today and Sweeney clues for the days when I don't know we'll let it roll and see how you get on with our link 11 coming up in 30 minutes shortly our weather and travel Ben Fogle and also gold director of this new Judy movie you've probably seen ads for on buses or bus stops around over the last few days maybe seen the trailer online somewhere Ronnie Zellweger playing Judy Garland's We'll find out all about that from the man who directed the movie for 11 this is Kate Bush and the. Spain past. The sky Spain. Stand. 26 minutes to 11 hour whether they cultivated a dry was sunny spells and patchy. No the breeze that I so high for just 14 tonight draw a long clay spell just a few patches of cloud and temperatures dipping to 2 overnight tonight tomorrow cold starts any shallow folks slow to clear that a dry and bright day with sunshine but cloudy at times highs of 15 and out 3 day outlook Friday windy especially along the coast on Friday with showers along Saturday we had drier day Sunday right at 1st clearing light b.b.c. Series travel trust. Let's update you with problems on the trains today his lower what's going on now good morning Danny will intend on Thameslink those delays up to an hour and some cancellations between Brighton and bed fed up with airport and between loose in the rain and because of damage to the overhead wires earlier this morning between some Pancras International and Blackfriars it's also delays up to 20 minutes and expressed in Victoria because of flooding from the junction that's also causing 20 minute delays on thought and between East Croydon and Victoria on the roads now and it's having an up field on the $22.00 in both directions from the cup would round about Luther to the with road at Ridgewood in the roadworks area with the temperate traffic light flowing everyone down and wholly at looking slow through the bright lights from Brighton Road northbound at Lane That's a crashing clipping on the 8590000 between you have to road and bridge road partially blocked with a very slow pick to anyone driving a little Hampton and we have reports but breakdown in Horsham on the 8 to 72 with the crossroads in the McDonald's looks to be called into lays and starting to. Slow it and believe in the right about Thera. The b.b.c. Travels into. School with you will travel updates 080587 want to enforce a 6 b.b.c. Salary travel do you trust. 23 minutes to 11 Wednesday morning Danny Pike Hitomi track terrifying the the. Roomies to find. That it was both. Adventure and explore Ben Fogle there in the strictly audience and how was James taken his rejection by the strictly audience do you know he's not a bad dancer but he's also not a bad loser so he actually took it country to newspaper reports he was actually really philosophical about it of course he was disappointed no one wants to go out in the 1st week but I think James will be the 1st to admit he's just not very good dancer and that's a shared ability or inability that I had with him and sitting next to that dance floor was quite frankly terrifying So if you had the opportunity would you. Do you know I've been off before but I think I think you pick your battles that's the way I look at it and I know as much as climbing Everest. Is not easy and fraught with risks I think it's more in my comfort zone having said that the one cabbie I'll give is that I've always approached life by tackling my fears and facing failure and taking on things I'm not very good at so I'd never say never but I think it would have to be the right time and quite frankly my children would be so embarrassed I don't think I could put them through it. It sounds a bit indoor walls to me to be honest with you to indorse how By the way how did you and James meet up because he's your adventurer you know we 1st saw in the t.v. Showed it me up on the on and all that So when did you to me so we it was about 15 years ago and I had I'd wanted a big challenge and I had decided set my heart on growing the Atlantic needed needed to find someone who I could partner with and I bumped into him so I seized the opportunity and asked whether he wanted to join well at the time I was pretty much just a reality show contestant I'd taken part a few years before in the b.b.c. Experiment Castaway where they set sent a group of volunteers to live on an island in the Outer Hebrides for a year and and I wanted something that would kind of take me out of my comfort zone and perhaps surprise people I thought I wanted to kind of put down more roots into who I was and create more substance so that's how we met and we went on to cross Antarctica and cross the quarter and we really have forged a great friendship He's godfather to my my kids and and we have experienced some some pretty unique places over the years. Ben Fogle bringing his latest tour Tales from the wilderness to our area in November and also March so bright and on the 19th the November g live November the 8 and the princes hold all the shot March 3rd the tales from which wildernesses been well it's kind of it's everything that this the tour is called Tales From The Wilderness any of your listeners in Brighton may know that that's where I spent most of my childhood my my late grandmother lived there so I spent almost every weekend and Brighton Beach and spending time in the South Downs was where I kind of developed my passion for nature and the wilderness and what I've done over the last 20 years or so a collector go I've been to so many places I feel so lucky I've met so many amazing people what I wanted to do was to bring it all together into one inspiring even the so much negativity out there there's so much pessimism the so much anger and hatred that I wanted to create something that makes the audience want to lift off their seat that leaves them empowered leave that leaves them wanting to follow their own dreams wanting them to climb their own Everest not the Everest I wouldn't recommend that anyone but their own Everest and I think that evening the best way to describe it is it's the story of a very shy failing school boy failed all of my exams wasn't destined for anything it's how the wilderness in all has shapes and forms whether it be oceans or rivers or mountains has has shaped me and made me the person I am and set my moral compass but also empowered me because there's so many people right now who are feeling disempowered in one reason or another and I want to kind of I want to return the power to the people by sharing some of my own experiences and trying to make sense of them and why I've done them and the lessons I've learnt so I think in a long winded answer to your question it's it's it's a mixture of everything there's a little bit of Everest a little bit of Atlantic a little bit of I'll. And a little bit of swimming with crocodiles a little bit of flesh eating disease but all wrapped up in in a nice cozy up lifting tail of the wilderness wasn't only digital is fascinating right so as a result of coming to your show doesn't mean we've got to put the crampons straight on and head up the newest Hill but it's about how you face adversity keep a positive attitude do something to change your situation if you can that's the message exactly it's I think there's a slight mis understanding a lot of people think that I'm some great sportsman I'm not I'm terrible everything I do any of your listeners would beat me in Iran any day I'm actually quite lazy I'm not very good at many things but what I am quite good at is controlling my mind and climbing Everest or or running across the Sahara desert isn't just about the physicality it's about silencing that inner voice of doubt that we all have and make make no mistake standing on a stage in Brighton or Gilford all the shot is quite frankly a terrifying prospect but models it's indoors for a start but also I'm not very confident and passive not even just pop but everything I've done over the years has been to try and increase improve my own confidence I still lack confidence I still have this most imposter syndrome that I'm not worthy and what I've tried to do with this tourist to strip it bare very honest with it it's quite emotional but I'm kind of following I suppose my in my mother's footsteps and my mum was born in Brighton as well in patches and they still live in Sussex mum and my mother is an actress so I suppose there was a part of me that that was destined for the stage and although I am quite shy and have confidence I'm able to hide hide behind when I say the facade it's not a facade but I'm able to hide behind the power of my stories and they're not just my stories that the people I've met and the places. That I've been and I certainly think that the audiences will will be inspired like a lot you've just mentioned not to strap on crampons and go up or. But to make a change in their own lives maybe it's a new career a new job and you house move to a new location a new relationship whatever it is that's what I want to return to people because the world has also become a little bit selfish and I want to kind of try and try and help people return to that that notion of selflessness by by by listening and understanding other people's experiences which which I've been lucky enough to to do so it's a quite an even Ben thank you for joining us today and send our best to James nice to speak to thanks thank you Tony thanks bye Ben Fogle Tales From The Wilderness at November 8th brought down Nov 19th and Prince's hole in all shots marched on b.b.c. One just reminds the toughest interview process I am disgustingly ambitious I need billions to have the last started I will never ever underestimate me in the business jungle there is one rule can't go beyond for the 1st time you are going to Cape Town in South Africa what we need to do is walk together and just boys some partially face the other tell you to want. To give a ball you lost complete control your sad the apprentice starts tonight at 9 on t.v. See one. First sorry and ne Hampshire b.b.c. Story with Danny boy. We are talking Judy Garland's new film Judi out Friday it's the right group of gold coming up after Georges rush. To. Speak. Like. You don't matter and. Live. Live. Live the. Alley. 1111 live. Let me know. If you will. Cut Thanks. Georgette don't matter now can't you see the miles this Friday already is l.-y. Is Judy Garland's in a new movie called Judy it focuses on events 50 years ago when she came to London. To try. The system just make me feel like. It's you know I know what kids need that I can't have the world's greatest entertainer out here without him Frank Frank Sinatra's here Frank is great but he has no interest to go . You can't even get London would offer you a lot of talk of the town is desperate to do with tools you have to leave for my children if I want to make enough money to be with my children. To stop. If you think. It's only it's out that way did you see my now driving it was not the truth intonation. Is fine when you go. Direct to rip a Gold joins me now hello good morning. Very well thanks firstly where does Judy Garland sit on your scale of show basic rights Oh I think she's lying right at the top she's out there with Elvis I think you know she's a she's an icon of the Golden Age of Hollywood but I also feel like she's in the tradition of you know John Stockton are the White House as well there's a kind of rock and roll's like her that I think it's a bit lost Ok which perhaps this film Vesta gets a bit tense about casting Ronnie's awake and how she transformed into the role. Well it was it was a tricky you know I wanted an actress who was the right age the part and he was about 47 when we were filming the period with filming I did a comedienne and I need someone who could really really sing but above all I wanted somebody who I felt like the public felt they could really connect with didn't feel like. Miles away but felt sort of available to us and it was a big risk a lot of people I think would be very intimidated by taking on a part like Judy Garland but I remember when Ronnie was cast as Bridget Jones and everyone said yeah I can't believe that thin Hollywood actress is going to play our bridge and she had a conquered that so I felt like if she had the courage to take that up and she could take video as well and so what was it like working through the process to be together not work so closely on a film like this it was great I mean we began with the music there's a lot of singing around his voice was pitched a bit higher than Judy Garland so we had to do quite a bit of work it kind of bring it down and then we while we were working the songs we began talking about the script and also beginning to look at the the whole costuming and the makeup and the hair and we started out with a bit like Gary Oldman in playing Churchill with loads of prosthetics and really trying to transform her in the end we began to strip it back and strip it back and let more of when a zone natural sort of structure come through and we had to like have teeth made a special conduct lenses and loads of wigs tried and bit by bit you sort of build up the character that's amazing Tell us about the events of $969.00 that we're going to see in this film and what was happening so Judy was really down on her luck she wasn't sort of at the height of her fame at all she had you completely broke she had nowhere to live she was being turned out hotels all across America she was seen as a bit of a busted flush she had been drinking a lot that kind of gave up on concert performances and she was desperate to get custody of her young children Gerry and then at the time Liz Minnelli was already about to become a star in the late sixty's and so she took on the series of concerts in London against probably better judgment about her and health and her ability to do them because they were going to pay her really well and she arrived in London with great excitement from the wider community all over the country and gave these series of concerts which were famously ramshackle sometimes absolutely transcendent and brilliant and like the best that she'd ever given and sometimes totally disastrous and I guess all filmy sort of exploring what that that pattern and cycle was for her and how it ended up. It's funny you mention that when you mention Amy Winehouse as well I was at the Brighton Center on the penultimate show that she prayed before they took her off her tour. 2008 I think it was and it was. You know she was virtually 2 hours late for the show but when she came on she just captivating massive voice came out of her and you weren't sure what was going to happen next so it was tense like that it was a kind of relaxing is very tense Yeah I mean you know we have this awful phrase over Britain very vocal Lovise but I do think performing is pretty singing is a huge huge sort of pressure I mean when you sing well and when you when your own voice is brilliant but you know you go out there even the best singers a terrified of that they're going to be come up short in some way from the audience's expectation and you know if you're a proper artist like Winehouse or Judy Garland where you just can't phone in you know if you got to do those songs you have to absolutely inhabit them and tell a story and really go their emotion that it takes its toll and especially if you're also like Winehouse and Judy where you're living a life that is unhealthy and you know the over thing for Garland is that she was effectively and I had it by the time she was you know before she left teenaged him you know the studio had prescribed prescription drugs to her up as I'm down as all through my childhood so you know she never really had a chance as you said in this film she's age 47 that period 1647 by then she'd been in showbiz for how long well she started to I mean it's a great newspaper account of a turning up 2 years old with her sisters on the stage and void of l. And then we could get her off for the audience going crazy for the baby girl she's got France is gone before she came to Garland so she was the in her d.n.a. She loved performing and all throughout her life she'd say that she never felt happier than when she was on stage and that was when she felt most at home but she had this ambiguous relationship to performing on the one hand it was very demanding but but she could find great love there as well. So those shows that she played I mean there might be people listening now who may be either remember the shows perhaps they were there as well did she pay many. Yeah they would have a couple months yes she'd. Been the ones that she was on for you know I spoke to quite a few I worked with Cameron Mackintosh the theatre pretties and he said he'd queued for days to try and get them and she'd been off and sick and then finally he said that she was meant to be on that nightly queue to get all that day and finally got a ticket and it was this incredible venue the talk of the town that some people might remember which is now it's now casino in letter square but then it was the sort of height of swinging London and they had this evening of entertainment through the evening where you'd sit around you'd have to know that all sorts of acts in the headline act would come on you know about 11 o'clock at night and kind of wild a crowd so it was a kind of it was a real event for London shows and who else is in the film alongside Renee. Jessie Buckley is wonderful and while the who support her then. Comes from a place her ex-husband said left a very charismatic young America article Finn which truck plays her husband he Dean's Michael Gambon appears about Adele phone it's a really great cast and I mean a lot of your work has been through the theatre so this move into films how has that been for you Rupa have you enjoyed this this process and what's your own assessment the film you've made. I loved that show really loved it it was such that you know it was so fun to make and when I was so brought in to work with and especially in the film I'm still about performing and what it means to be a showbiz legend so there's some crossover with with actually the my work on stage but it's been a blast to make it it's a very I think it's an affectionate film it's for all Judy struggles she was also a great wit and obviously a great great company and I think some of the kind of fun we had making it comes out in the film as well well thanks for joining us I love people and I really want to sing it thank you very much like you get to speak to director Rupert gold there for Judy his new film as Judy Garland's that is out instead of miles on Friday from a go and see that. Just come out to 11 here on b.b.c. Sussex and b.b.c. Sorry Danny Pike until midday so have a news update next then we've got the link 11. In there this morning a whole variety of songs from Star with some Barry White or some Elvis in the mix there as well can you work out the connection between our 5 songs on today's Link 11 where we'll find out after the. First sorry and ne Hampshire on f.m. Online digital radio and smart Speaker this is b.b.c. Sorry. It's 11 o'clock I'm Jay recounts Good morning M.P.'s will finally begin debating a new law on domestic violence today which has been delayed by Breck's it business it would stop alleged perpetrators from being allowed to cross examine their victims in court it would also create a legal definition of domestic abuse a number of people killed by a partner all relative is that it's highest level for 5 years and the u.k. Domestic abuse commissioner Nicole Jacobs says change is needed is a strong. Relief within domestic abuse services that we need public leadership on this issue specifically we have a postcode lottery in terms of services and and so we need to concentrate our efforts and really shine a light on the changes we need to see Boris Johnson preparing to make his speech to the conservative conference telling his party they must deliver Breck's it because voters feel they're being taken for falls by politicians the prime minister says he'll then set out details of an offer to the e.u. To try to end years of deadlock He's described the proposals as fair and reasonable but has said this is his final offer. Prince Harry has condemned the tabloid press accusing it of carrying out a ruthless campaign against his wife the Duchess of Sussex is suing the Mail on Sunday claiming it unlawfully published one of a private letters the newspaper says it stands by its story really green Slade who lives in Brighton is a former editor of The Daily Mirror to see says it's the powerful forces but the press particularly the time blood press is less powerful now than it was during his mother's era and probably less powerful than it's ever been so I'm not certain is he taking a sledgehammer to crack or not are you think he may well find that this is counterproductive a doctor is to face a series of questions this morning at inquest into the death of 10 of his patients from sari and Sussex Paul Miller was sacked from his job as a consultant you're all edges to the sorry hospital in 2014 over concerns about experimental treatments he used he's facing scrutiny Croly can Coroner's Court which is looking into why 8 men and 2 women died between 262015. A union's warning of exhausted ambulance staff in the South East if there's a no deal Brax it the g.m.b. Says Sea cam boss isn't making contingencies for overtime in hotel rooms in case crews a stir. In traffic jams lib Whitfield is the regional organizer for the g.m.b. She says paramedics are also worried about medical shortages this is just going to impact on a service that is already at maximum the staff or it during the test but that's not enough that's not enough ambulances and you at this on with massive write delays as well as stocking issues this is going to be a disaster well the ambulance service has told b.b.c. Sorry it's planning for any scenario to manage the impact an inquest heard how 2 young men from the 587104 c. S. B.b.c. Sorry travel you trust the link at.