But instead of showcasing her singing, it shows a man approaching her repeatedly, coming closer and closer. He reaches out and touches her - wiping something wet on her arm.
"At first I thought it was coffee," she says. "But when I watched the video back - you can hear him saying 'that's my pee'. My jaw dropped. I was horrified."
It's hard to believe what she's showing me, but she says this kind of behaviour is "unfortunately standard for a woman doing this kind of work".
She has many more videos - of men touching her without her consent, or demanding hugs or kisses for the money they've given.
"I've gotten a lot better at dealing with it," she says. "When I was 21, 22, when I first started doing this, I would go home in tears.
"It's just so degrading. It makes you feel objectified. Like - is that all you think of me?"
Sarah Everard's murder in 2021 caused outrage across the country. There was an outpouring of anger as women shared their stories of feeling unsafe, threatened and sexualised on the streets.
At the time there were promises - assurances to women that things would have to change. But four years on, many women here in Merseyside say they have the same feelings they did then.
"Men are honestly shocked when we tell them 'we don't feel safe'," says Kate Chadwick, from the Wirral charity Tomorrow's Women. "Pretty much every woman has had some kind of experience."
I meet her at a regular lunch club they host - at their building where men are not allowed inside. It's intended as a safe space for their members, who they are helping through everything from domestic violence to sexual assault. There's a medical clinic here, beauty treatment rooms, a computer lab - all staffed by women.
Kate shows me the pocket rape alarm they give out to the women who come here. She hopes they never have to use it, but "it makes them feel safer just having it".
"As a woman, in the winter it's a hard time just to exist," Kate says. "Women don't feel safe coming out of their homes. Routines will change. They don't want to walk in certain places.
"One of our members gets two buses home because it's safer than waiting at a dark bus stop to just get the one."
They are about to launch a photography exhibition around stalking and harassment. For this, they gave their members a camera and asked them to submit photos that show their experience being a woman.
There are several photos of dimly lit streets, bus stops with no one else there. One photo is a fist holding a key through the knuckles - an image most women will recognise.
Another picture is of an outfit laid out on the floor - a T-shirt, denim skirt and tights. It's titled What Were They Wearing?
"This can often be the first question in a sexual assault case," Kate says. "It really doesn't matter what the woman was wearing."
"It's definitely not getting better," she says. "In 2024, violence against women and girls was declared a national emergency. The statistics you read every day are shocking."
Later that evening, back in Liverpool, we meet Girls on the Go - a running club started with the express purpose of allowing women to exercise safely in the winter. It's 5.15pm when we meet for the run, and already dark.
The women running here list a collection of similar experiences. They have been catcalled, yelled at from cars, even chased while out running alone.
Run leader Madeline Cole tells me that, as a women-only club, they have had to modify their warm-ups because "as soon as you bend over to touch your toes, or go into a squat, the shouting starts".
Founder Steph Barney says she started the club because it is still "intimidating running alone as woman".
"Far too many women experience harassment and catcalling - we wanted to create a group where women would feel safer doing it together" she says. "Even in the summer you get sexualised just for wearing shorts. You have to restrict what you do. None of my male friends have ever had to worry about that."
I ask if anything would help them feel safer when out on their runs. "Better street lighting is a really obvious one," she says. "And one of the issues is that it's still not taken seriously by society. When you're catcalled, it feels embarrassing to say 'this is scary'.
"If it was taken more seriously - more women would speak out. And more could be done."
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The Angiolini Inquiry - which was established to investigate the circumstances surrounding Sarah Everard's murder - is due to publish its latest report later today.
It is examining whether there a risk of it happening again, police culture, and broader concerns surrounding women's safety in public spaces.
Deputy Prime Minister David Lammy will warn that long waiting times have "pushed the justice system to the brink of collapse".
He says delays have led some victims to give up on the legal process or doubt action will be taken if they report a crime, meaning perpetrators aren't held to account.
Laying out Labour's reforms, Mr Lammy will add: "For many victims, justice delayed is often justice denied … This simply cannot go on - we must be bold."
The latest figures suggest there is now a record-breaking backlog of 78,000 crown court cases, meaning some trials are not due to begin until 2030. Some estimates indicate this could balloon to 100,000 within the next three years.
Ahead of a speech later, Mr Lammy will appear on Sky News' Morning With Ridge And Frost shortly after 7am to discuss the situation.
What could be announced?
Over the summer, a former senior judge outlined his recommendations for overhauling the justice system.
Sir Brian Leveson has proposed diverting more offences to magistrates' courts - and restricting juries to "indictable-only" cases involving murder, rape, and manslaughter.
This could also extend to serious and complex fraud allegations, with judges given greater control over how cases should be handled.
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Mr Lammy, who also serves as justice secretary, has rejected claims that he is planning to scrap jury trials - and instead says he wants to "save" the system.
But the proposal is facing opposition from MPs and legal professionals - with the Law Society of England and Wales describing it as an "extreme measure" that may do little to eliminate the backlog of cases.
Shadow justice secretary Robert Jenrick claims Labour have exacerbated the problem and accused Mr Lammy of abandoning his principles.
He said: "This year alone, 21,000 court sitting days have been missed, and the court backlog is up 10% on their watch.
"Instead of depriving British citizens of ancient liberties, David Lammy should get his own department in order."
Ministry of Justice figures suggest close to half of cases in the backlog relate to violent and sexual offences, and only about 3% of criminal cases are currently heard by a jury.
'Not a silver bullet'
Mr Lammy is also set to announce that £550m will be given to victim support services over the next three years to help survivors and witnesses going through the justice process.
Incoming victims' commissioner Claire Waxman has welcomed the additional funding as a "necessary step" but warned: "The sums pledged are not a silver bullet for the wider crisis facing the sector."
Other measures are set to include additional sitting days in crown courts, and a match-fund scheme to support young people beginning careers as criminal barristers.
The Magistrates' Association's chief executive Tom Franklin said measures that speed up justice for victims, witnesses, and defendants are "worth considering - as long as they balance efficiency with quality of justice".
Age UK spoke to more than 2,600 people and found 11% will eat dinner alone on 25 December, while 5% will not see or speak to anyone the whole day.
Applied to the overall population, the findings suggest 1.5 million people will eat alone at Christmas, according to the charity.
Dame Joanna said the "silence can be deafening" for those left isolated and called it "a crisis hidden in plain sight".
The actor and campaigner is now joining other luminaries including Dame Judi Dench, Brian Cox and Miriam Margolyes to back Age UK's campaign against loneliness.
The charity says its volunteers made more than 70,000 minutes' worth of calls to people during Christmas week last year and is urging people to donate.
'A tragedy we don't talk about enough'
Age UK said it also supports coffee mornings and festive lunches to give lonely people the chance to enjoy in-person interaction.
Dame Judi said: "For so many older people, Christmas can be a time of silence - days without conversation or company."
Succession star Brian Cox called the issue "a tragedy we don't talk about enough".
He said: "Far too many older people are left spending the season in silence, when it should be a time of warmth, connection and joy."
Margolyes, of Harry Potter fame, added: "Growing older shouldn't mean disappearing into the background, we need to be seen, heard and celebrated.
"That's what Age UK is striving for - they're changing how we perceive age."
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The charity's chief executive, Paul Farmer, said: "Your donation could bring comfort, friendship, and care to an older person facing loneliness this winter.
"From friendly, weekly calls to local lunch clubs, we're here to make sure no one spends winter alone. But we can't do it without you."
Washington is "very optimistic" about reaching an agreement, Mr Trump's press secretary Karoline Leavitt said ahead of the trip, after Ukrainian officials met US representatives on Sunday.
Yet both sides have indicated there's a long road ahead before resolving key sticking points, namely control of Ukrainian territory and post-war security guarantees for Kyiv.
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Mr Putin implied last week he would stop fighting only when Ukrainian troops withdrew from all four Ukrainian regions that Russia illegally annexed in 2022.
Russia does not fully control these regions, but its armed forces made their biggest advance in Ukraine for a year in November, capturing 270 square miles, according to analysis by the AFP news agency.
Ukrainian president Volodymyr Zelenskyy has said repeatedly that giving up territory is not an option.
Europe 'exposed'
He was in Paris on Monday for talks with French president Emmanuel Macron, who held a joint call with British Prime Minister Sir Keir Starmer and reiterated his support for Ukrainian sovereignty.
But the diplomacy set in motion by Mr Trump's peace plan "painfully exposed" Europe's weakness, Nigel Gould-Davies of the International Institute for Strategic Studies wrote in a recent commentary.
"Despite being the main source of Ukraine's economic and military support, it is marginal to the diplomacy of the war and has done little more than offer amendments to America's draft peace plan."
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All the while, European allies have been the target of so-called "hybrid warfare", not least repeated airspace incursions by Russian drones and fighter jets.
NATO's most senior military officer went as far as to say on Monday that the alliance could consider a "pre-emptive strike" against Russia a "defensive action", according to the Financial Times.
Admiral Giuseppe Cavo Dragone's remarks were condemned as extremely irresponsible and an attempt to escalate tension by the Kremlin.
Some 37% told a YouGov-Sky News poll that Ms Reeves made out things were worse than they really are. This is much higher than the 18% who said she was broadly honest, and the 13% who said things were better than she presented.
This comes in an in-depth look at the public reaction to the budget by YouGov, which suggests widespread disenchantment in the performance of the chancellor.
Just 8% think the budget will leave the country as a whole better off, while 2% think it will leave them and their family better off.
Some 52% think the country will be worse off because of the budget, and 50% think they and their family will be worse off.
This suggests the prime minister and chancellor will struggle to sell last week's set-piece as one that helps with the cost of living.
Some 20% think the budget worried too much about help for older people and didn't have enough for younger people, while 23% think the reverse.
The poll found 57% think the chancellor broke Labour's election promises, while 13% think she did not and 30% are not sure. Some 54% said the budget was unfair, including 16% of Labour voters.
And it arguably gets worse…
This comes as the latest Sky News-Times-YouGov poll showed Labour and the Tories are now neck and neck among voters.
The two parties are tied on 19% each, behind Reform UK on 26%. The Greens are on 16%, while the Liberal Democrats are on 14%.
This is broadly consistent with last week, suggesting the budget has not had a dramatic impact on people's views.
However, the verdict on Labour's economic competence has declined further post-budget.
Asked who they would trust with the economy, Labour are now on 10% - lower than Liz Truss, who oversaw the 2022 mini-budget, and also lower than Jeremy Corbyn in the 2019 election.
The Tories come top of the list of parties trusted on the economy on 17%, with Reform UK second on 13%, Greens on 8% and Lib Dems on 5%. Nearly half, 47%, don't know or say none of them.
Only 57% of current Labour voters say the party would do the best job at managing the economy, falling to 25% among those who voted Labour in the 2024 election.
Some 63% of voters think Ms Reeves is doing a bad job, including 20% of current Labour voters, while just 11% of all voters think she is doing a good job.
A higher proportion - 69% - think Sir Keir Starmer is doing a bad job.




