radio - news
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RADIO
http://news.bbc.co.uk/hi/english/static/audio_video/programmes/radio_newsroom/transcripts/18_00hrs.stm
EARTHQUAKE 1
Property owners have been assessing the damage to their homes and businesses after Britain's strongest earthquake in a quarter of a century. The tremor -- which measured 5 point 2 on the Richter scale -- struck just before one o'clock in the morning. The epi-centre was near Market Rasen in Lincolnshire, but tremors were felt for hundreds of miles -- as far away as Southampton, Aberystwyth in west Wales and Dumfries in south west Scotland. There've been hundreds of accounts of lucky escapes -- with only one person seriously hurt. Insurers are predicting that claims could run into tens of millions of pounds. One of the worst affected areas was Gainsborough in Lincolnshire, where our correspondent Mark Simpson has spent the day:
SFX: Broken bricks
SIMPSON: Broken red bricks lie on the street, dozens of them, the most visual evidence of the overnight quake. That's what the aftermath of a British earthquake looks like. And when chimneys started falling at one am, this is what it sounded like:
CLIP: CHIMN ENYS FALLING
SIMPSON: And looking down from a helicopter, it became clear that the impact was random, rather than sustained:
SFX: INSIDE THE HELICOPTER
SIMPSON: Perhaps the most remarkable thing you can see from the air is the fact the even though Market Risen in Lincolnshire was the epicentre, it's here in Gainsborough, more than ten miles away, where the damage seems to be at its worst. Only a small number of householders were directly affected. But almost everyone heard the rumble:
MALE VOX POP 1: The whole room is shaking and vibrating, there's crashing sounds, really felt the house was coming down. I was petrifying.
MALE VOX POP 2: I just thought it was either a bad dream. I were taking a funny turn. I was actually quite relieved when I found it was an earthquake.
MALE VOX POP 3: Basically the bed started shaking and I woke my boyfriend up and he nearly fell out of the bed, it's actually broke my bed. So it's the first time the world's ever moved for me!"
SIMPSON: Gainsborough has now returned to normal or has it? Experts say there's still a chance of an aftershock.
FILM
http://www.dailyscript.com/scripts/HARRY-POTTER-AND-THE-ORDER-OF-THE-PHOENIX-2007-by-Michael-Goldenberg.pdf
GAME
TV DRAMA
http://www.dailyscript.com/scripts/grey_s_anatomy_into_you_like_a_train.pdf
PLAY
http://www.script-o-rama.com/movie_scripts/l/little-women-script.html

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