school in london and i didn t get in, which was just as well, because i d have been way in the back stage of the corps de ballet, kind of ideally out of the set. but i ve wanted to meet you for so long. oh, wow. ..so that s great. so, when you come onto a stage, misty. ..having not danced since 2019. mm hm. ..how are we feeling? how s your body doing? erm. ..i mean, it s like different air up here. yeah. you know, like i say. rarified. yeah, it s. ..like this very sacred space to be in. it s magic, you know, what we get to do up here? one of my favourite things to do is to be on the stage before the.you know, ..they let the house, they open the house, they let the audience in, i always am on the stage by myself. it s a different, very different feeling than being in a studio. the mirrors, you know, it s a completely different depth that you have to get used to. it changes your centre of gravity, your balance, everything. yeah. so it s something that i always do just to kind o
[the star-spangled banner] [the star-spangled banner] [the star-spangled banner] [the star-spangled banner] will: good morning and welcome to fox and friends, beautiful saturday morning. as we see her homes splashed across our television screens one week before christmas. rachel: don t say one week, it gets me stressed. i need something. you have a lot of support. rachel: i have little kathleens the do things not the way i like. pete: i don t think rachel: i thought you were talking about my older kids. pete: sometimes thanksgiving comes late in november and comes quick. i think those extra days help us so i feel ready too. rachel: if you start thinking about christmas at the start of advent it feels like a real rush to you because it s a shorter advent because of that longer period between. will: ready to go? ready to go? all right. tell me the story. will: the senate. rachel: we are not ready to go. will: they will return to capitol hill in hopes of a pre-chri
this rain in eastern areas will slowly tend to peter out and we will get some sunshine coming through and we could generate some showers all the way through yorkshire to the west midlands and into the west country. there will be some warm sunshine for many parts of the country and temperatures on the whole very similar to what we had today, but it may well be a bit warmer in scotland particularly in the east because we will see more sunshine. this area of low pressure is storm nino and it could bring more rain into italy and perhaps more rain into italy and perhaps more flooding, dominated by high pressure although there is this stripe of cloud in from the atlantic. i think on saturday looks quite cloudy for much of scotland and northern ireland, not much rain at all and most of the cloud quite thin and high. more on the way of sunshine for england and wales, that a fair weather cloud, one in the sunshine, temperatures 20 or 21, holding at 16 or 17 for scotland and northern i
rolling. florida governor ron desantis is apparently ready to end the speculation and officially challenged donald trump for the g.o.p. psidelomioowaoue hope. norah: the air national guardsman accused of leaking government secrets was previously caught searching for classified documents. but was not removed from his position. thousands have been forced out of their homes after heavy rains caused catastrophic flooding in northern italy. norah: how a recovery program tackles addiction and rebuild lives through the art of woodworking. everybody deserves a second chance. the new york city ballet recently promoted its first-ever asian american female principal dancer. what it means for increasing diversity on stage. to make anyone feel more accepted is just the best gift. norah: good evening, and thank you for joining us on this thursday nto the new details in the investgation of the deadly shooting rampage in farmington, new mexico. police
to conflicts in ukraine and syria, and raised concern over attacks injerusalem and the surrounding region. you re watching bbc news. now it s time for talking business. hello, everybody. a very warm welcome to talking business weekly with me, aaron heslehurst. let s go and take a look at what s on the show. the cost of living has been going through the roof, but can it possibly go up even more? and do prices ever really come down? we re going to be looking at how those prices get set and what goes on behind the scenes between growers, suppliers and the shops themselves. i m going to be discussing all of that with this crack team. there they are. commodities expert kona lasker haque can tell us where the markets think prices of raw materials are heading. kai markus mueller, who s the neuroscientist who gives us the psychology behind the way shops set their prices. and christel delberghe, she s the boss of eurocommerce, which represents the big retailers in some 27 countries ac