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31.7.07

London Tonight Tonight, Tues 31st July - and this one's a little surreal...

London Tonight Tonight, Tues 31st July - and this one's a little surreal...
Good afternoon.
From a pigeon's perspective, this London Tonight lot have a rather mixed programme for you tonight.
 
I have to declare an interest: I am a Trafalgar Square pigeon. I, and my many siblings (can't be sure about my parents, for obvious reasons) have felt under considerable threat for sometime. I do not take well to being called a "rat with feathers" and, given I do not have the vote, can do very little democratically to express my views about this man my great-grandfather called Red Ken. My grandfather knew him as an MP but we have only known him as Mayor. And he hates us. It is difficult to live with. He wants us dead. And to learn that some pie in the sky idea has wafted over from Los Angeles, like a mad migrating magpie, and involves putting us on "The Pill", makes me believe the man is not only bad but definitely mad.
Someone called Robin (is that supposed to be a joke?) Ross will explain all at 6.

Some of my human friends are active members of the Royal Society for the Protection of Birds - in London they even set up a branch call "RSPB Including Pigeons, Mr. Mayor". Anyway they, and pretty well anyone else who has joined a society to protect the lovely countryside and save the planet, are all threatened with a ban from Heathrow Airport because they want to protest against another runway. Incidentally, we don't want the runway either. 30 tons of aluminium hitting an innocent pigeon at 300 mph is not amusing. The Mayor has a rant about this at 6 and Simon Harris who, like me, enjoys flying, has the story.
 
A gull, who is a friend from the coast, tells me raw fish is terrific. Chilled but not frozen. That odd-ball EU Health and Safety mob insist it must be frozen when served to you humans as something called sushi. You'll break your teeth, I tell you! Anyway, apparently London Sushi chefs are in a flap about it as Phil will tell.
 
Tamzin, who loves all wildlife including pigeons, has unearthed some great old pictures of even older pops stars, all of whom Alastair recognises and many of whom he has even seen.
 
You'll be hearing from the Household Cavalry in Iraq and in their London barracks, plus the first interview with a remarkably brave and inspiring lady who was a victim of the London bombs but has taken to flying. She's just completed a fund-raising tour.
Now that's my kind of lady!
 

Alastair and Tamzin ask me to ask you to join them at 6.
(I'll be in the Square, unless that Livingstone bloke gets me first.)
Oh, I'm all of a flutter.

26.7.07

London Tonight Tonight 26th July

London Tonight Tonight 26th July
Good afternoon,
 
It's a bit of a dark and dreary day out there and unfortunately the first story we bring you tonight is also dark, and depressing. Last night a 16 year old boy was chased, by a gang reportendly shouting threats, through a Stockwell estate. He was caught, shot and pronounced dead at the scene. A horrifying crime but one that's becoming all too familiar on our streets.
We'll have the latest on THAT shooting on the day that the killer of another young Londoner was sentenced to life. Last year Hannad Hasan stabbed 15 year old Kiyan Prince through the heart. Today he was told he must serve at least 13 years in prison. Kiyan's dad is coming into the studio to tell us his feelings on this sentence and to update us on his ongoing campaign.
 
Also ..... were you singing along to Babs Streisand last night, or Joss Stone...or chuckling away at the premiere of the new Simpson's movie. If so did you manage to get home OK ? Thos three huge events all took place at the O2 last night, making it a very busy night for the venue. And it seems many people struggled to get away, some waiting for up to three hours for a cab home. We'll investigate further and let you know what we discover.
 
Plus, the thesbian theologian and his church / theatre project....
The one-off works of art based on your DNA.....
And the subject we've all been obsessed with for weeks now - yep that's right the weather. Chrissie will be here to tell us if there's light at the end of the tunnel.
We'll see you at 6
 

25.7.07

London Tonight Tonight Wednesday 25th July

London Tonight Tonight Wednesday 25th July
Good Afternoon Everyone.
Hope you're well. Hope you're not working too hard. And if you've got the day off - keep it to yourself.
 
This evening, we're going to be looking westwards. The floods are coming. We've all watched the misery of thousands of people, forced out of their homes for the best part of a week now. Well, much of Oxford (less than 60 miles from London) is under water today and it looks like our corner of England is next. So, a solid chunk of our programme is taken up with events along the Thames.
Simon Harris reports on the picture in Reading where residents could be hours away from disaster... Phil Bayles will cover preparations in Marlow and Henley (and the plan to divert floods around Windsor)... and Chrissie is at work ON the river, out on patrol with the RSPCA. Later, busy girl, she'll talk us through all the flood watches and warnings we need to know about.
 
Away from the floods, Piers Hopkirk has the story of a man, his medals and the thieves who stole them. Yep, two conmen lied their way into a pensioner's house and took 6 medals in all. Two were for his service in the RAF. The others rewarded his father's duties in the First World War. The search for the really precious possessions is on - and the cops are keen to get them back to their rightful owner.
 
We'll also have a restored organ at the Hammersmith Apollo... and the premiere of 'The Simpsons Movie' - NOT now showing in Hammersmith, but at the O2 (which looks uncannily like the Simpsons' home town, Springfield).
 
Okay, plenty more work to do before we can serve it all up, so away we go...
See you at six.
Ben & Katie
 
 

24.7.07

London Tonight Tonight Tuesday 24th July

London Tonight Tonight Tuesday 24th July
Hello to you.
 
The sun's shining. Honest. If you're working somewhere that doesn't have windows (or you lost the weekly raffle for the desk by the window) - go outside and see for yourself. Mother said there'd be days like this. And she was right.
However, we - and some of the rest of the country - are not out of the watery woods just yet. As the water that fell out of the sky over the weekend slowly surges down the Thames, there are communities in our parts who's worst fears have, or may soon, come true. That's obviously ONE of the stories we'll be looking at this evening. Chrissie will also have the all-important forecast too.
One thought that will have occurred to lots of people watching the dreadful pictures of flooded homes over the last few weeks - WHY were the houses built so close to the river? They were bound to flood, weren't they? Much the same point is made about future house-building in a Government report - that came out 4 years ago. And yet there are still plans to build on a flood-plain at Barking Reaches. Damien Steward will look at the common sense of it all.
 
And what of the common sense of paying a man MILLIONS of pounds for... well, what DID Bob Kiley do for London transport? The Mayor reckons he's some sort of God. An expensive God, certainly - but now that he seems to be firmly on his way back west, we ask was he worth the money? Mind you, the total bill might not be quite so huge thanks to London's booming property prices ... Confused? Glenn Goodman will try to clear things up for us.
 
Our lead tonight, though, has the 'you have GOT to be kidding' factor. Extraordinary and sickening. Former boxer James Oyebola was in a London club last night when someone started smoking next to him. We know that's against the law. He knows that's against the law. But after he had POLITELY pointed that out... he was shot. He's now fighting for his life in hospital. Liz Wickham will have the latest on the condition of a man described by former colleagues as a 'gentle giant'.
 
On a lighter note, we'll also have Carmen (Jones not rollers)... bike thieves (getting their glorious comeuppance).
It's all on ITV1 at SIX.
 
See you then,
Ben & Katie.
 

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20.7.07

London Tonight Tonight Friday 20th July

God to Noah : Build me an ark.
Noah to God: Fine.
Just one question.
What's an "ark" ?
It felt a bit that way this morning in London and , suddenly, as if the dove of peace had landed on my upturned hand and the rainbow of promise had bathed our street in bright pastels, it stopped.
But we have pictures of all that happened in between : from our brilliant cameramen and women, and from you, at your very best, with mobile phones and videos. Get your wellies and sou'westers on and be there at 6. Glen risks the deeps on our collective behalves so you won't miss a frame.
Americans don't do irony but they do in Wandsworth: in the midst of the deluge, a bolt of lightning struck a block of flats causing a rather frightening fire. As gallons of water fell from the sky, yet more gallons of water jetted up - from the brave men and women of the LFB.
The latest on that at 6 as the Met say avoid Wandsworth at all costs. Unless you're a duck.

Our producer Faye is young, beautiful and very gifted: but she is young. OMD were part of the soundtrack to my early twenties - Tamzin, I thought rather cruelly, just pointed out that her dad liked them, too. And then poured salt into my wounds by the sackful by flipantly announcing her dad retires today. Age shall not weary them? Yeah, yeah...
Anyway, Faye was less clear about OMD but bravely commissioned a piece on their comeback. In the hands of Steve Hargrave, all should be well. (What would Faye do, I worry, if they DID find Elvis on the moon? It troubles me).

James King reviews the movies tonight. Apparantly Faye and The Boss have a little competition to see who can write the funniest caption explaining who he is and/or what he does: see if you can spot it tonight and, indeed, in future weeks. It is Friday. We like having a little fun. Yes, I know: it really is a very "little" fun....

Finally, for the political classes, me included, we will confirm what happened in Ealing last night. General Election October 25th 2007. You heard it here first.
Plus papers, weather (if they dare !!) and What Not to Miss for your weekend planning. Faye wasn't sure we had room but Tamzin insisted.
As I conclude, traffic wardens are dealing with cars that were abandoned by their owners when caught in the rain. You won't believe what they are doing but, if you tune in at six, be more than ready to take up arms against a sea of troubles and by opposing, end them. (apologies to Shakespeare)
Tamzin and I, all the whole damp team who can't wait for dry socks and cocoa, hope you will be there at 6.

Alastair

London Tonight Tonight Appeal

Hi everyone,
Time for you to be the journalists!
Are you flooding right now... Is the rain pouring down where you are?
We want to see your video and any pictures you have of the storms, and the wild weather.

Email us at: londontonight@itvlondon.com
Text us: 07738 100 200

Thanks - and get sending!

More from the team later...

Faye (The Desperate Programme Editor!)

19.7.07

London Tonight Tonight Thursday 19th July

Afternoon!

We know how worried Londoners are by gangs of teenagers hanging around on street corners, and with summer holidays looming, I guess there's a concern that problem is only going to get worse. So any courses or schemes to keep young people happy, occuppied and off the streets should be welcome, right? Well .. kind of . Classes are being offered in .. Grafitti. And lots and lots of you think it is the most ridiculous idea they've ever heard. We'll be letting you have a right old ding dong with the government adviser who's dreamed up the scheme.

A sad story of a woman who died of a particularly severe epileptic fit. Her family aren't blaming the hospital that had been treating her .. but they are asking us all to be more aware of the real dangers of this disease that can strike at any time.

An extraordinary tale of canine medical magic.. yes, we're going to introduce you to the world's first bionic dog. No, really, we are! And he swims!

We've got a wonderful happy ending following an ad in the newspaper for adoptive families in the Afro Caribbean community ... we've got the princess of punk herself in the studio, Siousxie Sioux minus her Banshees ...
and we've got Chrissy telling us what we already knew .. that this summer is SOGGY!!! This date last year .. guess what the temperature was... 36 degrees centigrade. Ah well.. I suppose that was a bit TOO hot!

See you at 6, Katie and Al.

18.7.07

London Tonight Tonight Wednesday the 18th July

Good Afternoon one and all.

We hope you're all well and enjoying what's left of your Wednesday.

Busy programme this evening and, of course, the BIG news is the story about one of the companies that's been given an awful lot of money to maintain the tube. Metronet has effectively gone belly up - called in the administrators this morning. They say they're owed half a billion quid for work they've done above and beyond their contract. Not many other people seem to agree - which has left them rather short. So, what of our tube journeys? What of the workers? What of the bills that need paying? Simon Harris is our man with the answers.

Actually, there seems to be rather a lot of people playing the blame game this evening. A businessman who slipped over at Marylebone said rotting petals from a florist were to blame... the owner of the florist said there's no proof... a judge said it probably WAS the petals and says there's rather a lot of compensation due (we're talking over a MILLION). Quite a barney. Lots at stake. Glen Goodman's on top of it all.

Now, every parent will tell you that little boy or girl is one in a million. Mr and Mrs Fitzgerald can rightly claim that their son Lucas is rather rarer. Like, er, doctors didn't know of another living child with his deadly condition. How was he cured? Who cured him? Liz Wickham has been to meet the Family Fitzgerald.

We'll also be looking back at 30 years of rocking against racism... there'll be the latest on the two London schoolgirls accused of drug-smuggling in Ghana... and our Chrissie will tell you just how much rain we're going to have tomorrow.

See you at SIX. On ITV1.

Katie & Ben

17.7.07

LONDON TONIGHT TONIGHT: Tues 17th July

Good afternoon from all at London Tonight where Ben Scotchbrook is introducing his delightful son, Noah, to the collective: I smiled but pressed on with work. I was celebrating my daughter's graduation at midnight so toddlers are a distant, but agreeable, memory.

More of a disagreeable memory is all that money Metronet got, indirectly from you. They got it on your behalf and spent it, only to come back and ask for more. Tim O'Toole was pretty clear, on last night's show, where the blame lay for the debacle and, this afternoon, Ken Livingstone was even clearer: unless you are a Metronet share-holder you may well find yourself in gleeful agreement with him. Harris, who else, is the man with the Oyster card and Sherlock Holmes magnifying glass, poring over the details.

Still on dosh, MPs asked George Galloway MP, (Respect, Bethnal Green & Bow) for the details of where his Mariam charity got all their money from. It wasn't his answers that upset them half as much as his attitude towards them. Two falls, two submissions or a pin-fall and George looks set to spend 18 working days in his Constituency rather than in the House. It's the Parliamentary equivalent of being told to stand in the corner. The whys and wherefores from Ronke.

Noah Scotchbrook is now screaming.
I think my daughter is quietly sleeping it off.
We press on.

A total non-sequitor but a mini Taj Mahal floated down the Thames this afternoon and Joanna Lumley spoke elegantly about it: hear her explanation at 6.

Finally, two horror stories that need little explanation but begger comprehension.
In those halcyon days of April, a man was sun-bathing on Clapham Common. What woke him was sheer agony: Emma has the story.
And we bless them, we use them, we often befriend them: the corner shop angels with a pint of milk at midnight or a paper and (for me) a packet of ciggies at first light. We bring you the terrifying images of what has prompted them to set up a "life or death" reward fund to help catch the people making their lives a nightmare as they try to make our lives easier to live.

It is from a brilliant London Programme and you won't want to miss a frame.

Noah has been taken away and some seem to be getting back to work.
Ha! Good to be ahead of the game.

See you at six.

Alastair and Katie.

16.7.07

LONDON TONIGHT TONIGHT: Mon 16th July

Good afternoon and welcome to Day One of another week of London Tonight.

Where to start?
Venomous ferocity in Farringdon?
The blitzkrieg on boards, boasting about bountiful estate agents?
Metronet's plea for more millions?
Or Boris?

All is, or all are, there tonight so you don't have to chose: just be there at 6 and feast on it all.

Very few politicians are so iconic that their surnames seem superfluous.
London already has one - Ken.
And we could get another - Boris.

Boris isn't talking, beyond confirming that he wants to ride into battle in Tory colours in search of your votes. "I am not a Tory", I hear many of you scream. Doesn't matter. The Tory party are asking all Londoners who they think should be the Tory candidate for Mayor. So you get not one but potentially two chances to electorally endorse or democratically defenestrate Boris: first, as candidate and next, possibly, as Mayor.
All will be explained when we are joined by the leader of the Conservative Party, David Cameron, live at 6.

It's all got terribly difficult for Metronet: LT keep changing their minds and asking for extra bits and different standards. They find they need half a billion pounds to get back on the straight and narrow.
No they don't, say LT.
And the man who has to decide between these warring factions has decided who is right: full and frank details at 6 and live reaction from the man who runs the Underground, Tim O'Toole.

There's to be a purge on estate agent's boards - shame it is not the estate agents themselves some might argue but we couldn't possibly comment.

Farringdon has a problem with rattle snakes. Yes, that's what I thought too; so we will attempt to explain, without frightening you.

A lack of the right documents for you and your car used to entail a trip to the Cop Shop - now your pride and joy can end up in the crusher if you are caught short of a license, insurance or road tax: and it is happening with record frequency.

I've run out of ink and energy!

There must be something for you in that lot! And the weather and the papers...and your e-mails on Boris.


Katie and I think you have no excuses left.

See you at 6.

13.7.07

LONDON TONIGHT TONIGHT: Friday 13th July

Woohay everyone. It's F-F-F-FRIDAY. (Sorry too much coffee.)

Ahead, we hope, a gloriously relaxing weekend. For those who like a drop... a cheeky bottle of white perhaps to waken the palate - or, if you prefer, a case of lager. And for the non-drinkers - Ribena.

Fingers crossed we'll have the weather to barbecue by, or at least, go out without galoshes... Chrissie, of course, will have a the full story - aided by Darth Vader and Princess Leia. Now, THAT's woken some of you up, hasn't it?

What about this? 'Boris Johnson WILL run for Mayor'. That certainly woke US up when we read it this morning - but, from his office today, no word of confirmation. We wait, eagerly, to hear, because - let's face it - love Livingstone, or loathe him, you have to agree when he says 'Boris as Tory candidate' would make for interesting electioneering. Piers Hopkirk will sum up the state of play this evening.

As for the rest of the programme, we start with a man who set out to kill people because he thought they were 'sinners' - you may remember the story we covered last year of a petrol-bombing on a shop in Kennington. Two men died. Tonight we have the CCTV pictures of Robert Torto as he prepares and then carries out his deadly attack - and Phil Bayles will have the full story.

Next up: a tax on old bags - not really. It's a tax on NEW ones. If the London boroughs get their way, every time you buy shopping and you want to carry it out in a plastic bag: "that'll be 10p, please". They say it'll cut down the number of plastic bags going to landfill sites and they'll spend their windfall on being even greener. Glen Goodman is our bag-man.

Damien Steward, meanwhile, will be bashing those estate agents who clutter our streets with their ugly boards... especially when they've nothing to sell, or let, at all.

We'll be also be finding out whether 'Harry Potter Five' is worth the price of a ticket... and, AND... we'll be talking to a 'Teacher' and 'The Master' about their life together on the London Stage: Adrian Bower and John Simm are in to talk about 'Elling' which is on at the Trafalgar Studios.

So... put the Pinot (or 'bena) on ice, gather round the TV, and we'll all start the weekend together - on ITV1, at SIX o'clock.

See you then,

Ben

12.7.07

London Tonight Tonight Thursday 12th July

Good afternoon.
On the tie issue, I choose not to wear one on Fridays because it is a drop-down, unwind, get-ready-for-the-weekend sort of day. That's all. Paxman and Snow can elevate it to an issue of intellect if they want, but for me it is about chilling out. Just wanted to get that off my chest - or neck.
Second, I am told cycling is the second most popular sport in this glorious land of ours, second only to swimming. I'd have sworn fishing was up there but, hey, I'll accept producer Faye's statistics, hook, line and sinker.

More of those sports in a moment but we start with a case of dumb naivity, cynical greed or total innocence.
The drama is unfolding in Ghana, west Africa, as I write. The dramatis personae include two 16 year girls, who we think hail from north London; a team from UK Customs and Excise on an undercover operation in west Africa; and some heavies from the Ghanian authorities who say the penalty for drug smuggling is a minimum 10 year term. At the heart of it all is 6.5 kilos of cocaine: and it's our top story tonight.

Cycling at great speed is, apparantly, compelling. Right. They even do it really slowly and then..... shoot off, at great speed. Apparantly THAT is even more compelling. Indeed, compelling on an Olympic scale. Where they will be doing it in 2012 will be revealed to Simon Harris, our man in the peloton...

Swimming is different: elegant, almost an art-form, it can be enjoyed by giggling babies, thrown in at the deep-end by parents who have read the latest text books, right through to gods and goddesses who glide through the water at amazing speeds, propelled by a range of amazing strokes. Then there are the strange folk who Chrissie found. They have swum across London, via all manner of swim-places and they end up on Hampstead Heath, tonight. Worth tuning in just to fathom, really.

Easier to fathom is why 36 Sat-Navs are stolen every week in London - rapid turn-around and good retail value for the scum who lift them. A good-guys-and-gals guide to how you can avoid becoming this week's number 37.
Also, Dave Stewart on how he picked an Annie Lennox sing-alike for his show at Tower of London from hundreds of wannabes. And an invitation to you to nominate the really good people in your community who deserve a public, and very spendable, pat on the back: details at 6.
Katie and I really hope you can make it... unless you are fishing. In which case, we are so sorry.

Alastair

11.7.07

London Tonight Tonight Wednesday 11th July

Good Afternoon from the 'London Tonight' gang,

We hope you're all enjoying the fact that having slaved past midday on this Wednesday, we are now - officially - over half way through the week. That means talk in the canteen and by the noticeboard can legitimately turn to plans for the weekend.

We do still have the day's news to take care of... and we start with a bit of a barney, frankly. And it's a barney which really could effect all of us. Published today - proposals for a massive makeover of the way healthcare is organised and provided here in London. It'll mean benefits for patients says the Health Minister behind it. It'll be a complete disaster says a London health charity. Emma Walden has the details - and after she's presented all the arguments - we'll be looking to hear your points of view... please.

It's likely you'll have an opinion on the three youngsters who've been caught on camera as they run this way and that across a live railway line near Staines. The pictures take your breath away. The kids were lucky a train didn't take their lives away. The BTP gave us the pictures to show and we'll be hearing from a man who's son was hit and killed by a train.

Ronke Phillips probably has the most difficult story to cover this evening - it's the launch of a new campaign by the Met to clampdown on the dreadful custom of female circumcision. Girls as young as four are subjected to the brutal act which many defend in the name of tradition or religion. It's a powerful report.

And we'll be asking whether the elderly should get privileged parking... whether a talented and popular 'music meister' has what it takes to wow the art critics... and what on earth Chrissie is doing on the beach... in Greenwich.

Much to see - all at the usual time, usual place.

See you at SIX on ITV1.

Ben & Katie

10.7.07

London Tonight Tonight Tuesday 10th July

Hello: I'm Dan the Director and I wanted to tell you what Al and Katie and Faye and all the others have planned for you. I just have to get it to your screens so here goes!
If the next series of Top Gear did an episode of great getaway cars, I very much doubt a brand new Bentley Continental would come top of the billing, but that's just what happened when two robbers turned up at an unsuspecting high-end jewellers. We have the full amazing story including exclusive CCTV footage.

And the gang behind the Olympics might need a getaway car if a group of MPs are predicting correctly!
The Public Accounts Committee says there's a lot going wrong with the 2012 plans - and there's no-one taking the bull by the horns. Tessa Jowell talks to us LIVE and we will ask if she is the person to grab the horns!

Chrissie's with former Squeeze, Jools Holland. No, not literally - but she is interviewing him about the start of the Summer Swing festival at Kew Gardens. And as if that wasn't enough showbiz for you - Steve Hargrave talks to the artist formally known as Blondie. Debbie Harry is swapping her rock n roll days for something slightly more sedate. In fact she's turning Ben Elton to help do the songs for a new musical hitting the West End.

There's lots more than that - but as Director of the show, and guest writer on London Tonight Tonight - I simply haven't got time to tell you... You'll just have to watch Al and Katie to find out.

See you at 6.
Dan.

9.7.07

London Tonight Tonight Monday 9th July

Afternoon.
A child will look you in the eye and say "I didn't mean to !"
Most times, you soften and give them the benefit of the doubt.
And you must have heard "that's not what I meant" a million times.
But a jury was eye-balled by three men who said, despite packing rucksacks with a bizarre and potentially deadly mixture of explosive materials, and setting foot on tube trains and buses with trigger devices at the ready that "they didn't mean to" and that mass murder was "not what they meant".
The Jury told them to take a hike, found them guilty and they await sentencing.
The full, horryfying story of the 21/7 bombers at 6.

I love "Make me Smile" by Cockney Rebel - Steve Harley, lead singer of Cockney Rebel, doesn't. Well, not anymore it seems. He is coming in tonight to explain himself. Not really. He is coming in to explain what he's doing on the West End Stage but we might mention "Make me Smile". He also says he was visited as a sick child by the Rolling Stones. I am deeply envious and would have feined serious illness to win such a benediction. He saw my idols and he dislikes one of my favourite songs? Katie will have to turn referee, me thinks.
Did the Stones wash their hands before and after seeing the poorly young Harley? I have my doubts. Nowadays it is a more serious matter with MRSA and cDiff. We reveal the Hospital which has received a final warning over cleanliness. If the NHS safety people don't get Satisfaction, the Hospital will be told that was The Last Time.

There's a by-election in Southall on the 19th - we look at the runners and riders in what looks like a fascinating race, and a real test for all the parties amid talk of early elections.
Weather, papers and your e-mails on hospital cleanliness and I hope you give us a clean bill of health for what has the symptoms of being a rather interesting programme.
Best wishes from the man in the white coat, Alastair, and the calm but authoritative woman, clutching her referee's whistle, Katie.
See you at 6.

5.7.07

LONDON TONIGHT TONIGHT: Thurs 5th July

Greetings from the London Tonight team, occupying the same space in the same city in the same land, as usual.

But tonight, our theme is another country.

Ronke reports on the money transfer business which existed to dispatch large quantities of cash for large numbers of people to ... other countries. It is a common practice for many immigrant workers and even second and third generation ethnic minority families who still have loved ones in another country. But the money has gone missing. Possible millions of it, reducing thousands of people here, and abroad, to a state of distraught panic. The company say "sorry" .
Ronke's investigation will find out if it's that simple.

Many of you set off on a tube journey this morning as office workers or shop-keepers or students. But, when a nightmare struck hundreds of feet underground, you turned into video journalists. A derailment sent several people to hospital but, fortunately, none have died. But what country do the people who left debris on the line, live in? And it was on Metronet's manor that it happened, a company we increasingly think occupies a space on this earth that few of us can fathom!

Race tracks are for race cars and Great Ormond Street Hospital is for poorly children. Two very different worlds. Hear how the geniuses of GOSH saw something in what the F1 pit-crews do for Lewis Hamilton and Kimi Raikenon that could help them help the kids. Brilliant stuff with Tamsin Roberts at the wheel - or in the white coat.

Hairspray premiers in Leicester Square with John Travolta dressed, not as another country but as another gender. Steve is there.

And Rupert Everett, who stared in Another Country, one of my all time favourites, has written an autobiography: hilariously naughty and emotionally frank. Rupert is with us tonight and I think you ought to be, too.

Unless you're off to another country in which case .. au revoir!

If not, see you at 6.

Alastair and Tamzin.

3.7.07

London Tonight Tonight Tuesday 3rd July

Good evening. And we hope you'll join us for a very special edition of London Tonight, tonight.
You probably saw on our programme yesterday that a teenaged boy was found guilty of the murder of 15 year old Kiyan Prince last May.
Hannad Hasan took Kiyan's life with a penknife, and left a family destroyed...
For the last year, London Tonight has been given unprecedented access to Kiyan's relatives. To his mother and father, and even his younger sister, as they tackle life without him.
Despite his pain, Kiyan's dad Mark is determined to do something more positive. He's decided that the only way to make sense of his loss, is to make sense of what's happening on our streets. So he's taken his fight to the frontline. He's working with young people to raise their awareness of what happens when you carry a knife, and when you use it.
And during a film to be shown on London Tonight at six o'clock, we witness his courage in action.
We follow him as he talks to the young boys drawn into a life of crime, we join him as he struggles to cope with the pressure of THREE murder trials, and we help him create a campaign that we hope will make Kiyan's life matter.
It's a remarkable story, and one that we should all take courage, and inspiration from.

Make an appointment to see "Put the Knives N Guns Down" here on ITV1 at 6.

2.7.07

London Tonight Tonight Monday 2nd July

Good afternoon and welcome to the London Tonight blog. I hate that term but I am assured that is what this is. I see it more as my note to you inviting you to join Katie and me at 6. Oh well...

Charles Manson claimed the Beatles song "Helter Skelter" was partly to blame for his downward spiral into mindless murder. He was an out of sorts hippy, leading a gang of like-minded n'er do wells in the California of the 60s. Sick and sad stuff.
So what is it that drives a group of men and women from various countries in the Middle East to plan mass murder in London and/or Glasgow and/or goodness knows where? Add to that the disturbing fact that two of them were Doctors, working in the NHS and some of what you believe in starts to crumble. That they were prepared to come from Scotland to London and then go back again to carry out an attack gives a terrible insight into their determination. They haven't all been caught yet. Try to get on a mainline train or fly in or out of one of our airports and you'll get a taste of what is being done to protect you. We seek to give you full coverage of the measures and ask the additional question: where was Sir Ian Blair? Not before the events but after them - conspicuously absent. See what you think and then tell us.

From a plan to committ mass murder to a single act of savage violence that resulted in a single death. Kiyan Prince was murdered and his killer was convicted today. We try to make sense of that, too, but it is even more difficult.

Very difficult to understand, albeit for very different reasons, is why Buffy the Vampire Slayer was asked to open the Harrods sale: many wanted to avoid this story but it is so odd we felt we had to take you there, silver bullets and garlic cloves to hand.

We've a Live Earth competition with great prizes, so tree huggers and pop fans among you hang in there.

And "Working Day 1" of the Smoking in Enclosed Spaces ban and, outside our building, the smokers are thinning out.
We have a powerful story from one elderly lady after 50 years of lighting up. If anything is going to sway me and you (if you are a smoker), it is her experience.

See you ar 6.
Alastair