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tv   Headliners  GB News  January 8, 2024 5:00am-6:01am GMT

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>> hello, good evening. you're with gb news. i'm sam francis . with gb news. i'm sam francis. the headlines at 11. this week's planned tube strikes in the capital have been suspend . and capital have been suspend. and that's after progress has been made in discussions between the rmt and transport for london. however tfl is warning that there will still be disruption tomorrow because the walkouts were called off so late underground workers were due to strike in protest over a 5% pay offer, but rmt general secretary mick lynch has said that further negotiations can now take place
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after significant funding has been made available . we're being been made available. we're being warned that snow is on the way as an amber cold health alert has been issued for parts of england, the met office has also issued a yellow weather warning from tomorrow morning. that from 4:00 tomorrow morning. that means and ice is likely to means snow and ice is likely to affect roads and train services in parts of greater london, kent, surrey, east sussex and in west sussex . meanwhile, more west sussex. meanwhile, more than 160 flood warnings remain in place across the country and over 1800 properties have been damaged by flood waters after being criticised for not meeting with flooding victims, the prime minister has today been speaking with some of the residents affected in oxford during his visit . he affected in oxford during his visit. he said that the government's flood defences are working . working. >> there have been many people affected by what's happened over the past week , but also 49,000 the past week, but also 49,000 homes have been protected from flooding as a result of that investment, and also things like the pumps that i've been seeing here today and the flood
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barriers just in the community. i've been walking around hundreds homes have been hundreds of homes have been protected because those protected because of those investments. of this investments. but of course, this is be devastating for is going to be devastating for those are impacted, which is those who are impacted, which is why financial in why there's financial support in place. but overall, the investment that's going into flood defences is a very , flood defences is at a very, very high level. >> well, in other news, the conservatives chosen the conservatives have chosen the partner of disgraced former mp peter bone replace him . peter bone to replace him. according to the party chair, richard holden , helen harrison richard holden, helen harrison was as the new was selected as the new candidate for wellingborough at was selected as the new cimeetingfor wellingborough at was selected as the new cimeeting of wellingborough at was selected as the new cimeeting of members>rough at was selected as the new cimeeting of members this|h at a meeting of members this afternoon. a by—election is being held there after mr bone was found to have indecently exposed himself a staff exposed himself to a staff member and trapped them in the bathroom of a hotel room. he has denied allegations . rishi denied those allegations. rishi sunak has confirmed that the government is looking at exonerating post office staff that were caught up in the horizon. it scandal. the justice secretary, alex chalk, is considering options to clear the names of branch. branch managers who were convicted of false accounting of theft and of fraud . more than 700 were given
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criminal convictions after faulty software had made it look as though money was missing from their shops . victims say it's their shops. victims say it's like a war to get compensation, and that more pressure is needed to get the help that they need . to get the help that they need. and it's the fifth day of the longest nhs strike in history. today, as junior doctors hold their ground over pay and conditions, hospitals concerned with patient safety are pleading for an end to the industrial action, with several nhs trusts declaring a critical incident as a result of those walkouts. talks between the government and the british medical association broke down last month, with the union claiming its members pay had been cut by more than a quarter since 2008, and a firefighter from lancashire is attempting to break a guinness world record for the most weight , lifted in just 24 hours for 82 year old glenn bailey. needs to lift more than 580,000kg before tomorrow to beat the current record. he is hoping to lift
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60kg more than 12,000 times. he decided to take on that challenge to raise money and awareness for the firefighters charity, which provides health and wellbeing services as good luck to him . that's the latest luck to him. that's the latest from the gb newsroom . for more, from the gb newsroom. for more, we're on tv, digital radio and our website gb news. com this is gb news . gb news. >> hello and welcome to headliners >> i'm josh howie and i'm very blessed that joining me tonight to go through monday's newspapers are two of the best in the business leo kearse from the comedy business and louis schaefer from the telling you his real thoughts and then pretending they're a joke when he gets trouble. he gets in trouble. >> business. he gets in trouble. >> hello ass. he gets in trouble. >> hello gentlemen. you have >> hello gentlemen. do you have a .7 a nice weekend? >> it okay i was doing i was >> it was okay i was doing i was doing it doing gb news all weekend, so it didn't really feel like weekend. >> you know my shift, is it?
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yeah >> what about you, louis? >> what about you, louis? >> i feel like you've just exposed to the world out there. >> told f.- f..- >> i've told them all about the real you. >> i've told them all about the reaiiyou. >> i've told them all about the reaii think that people know that >> i think that people know that i'm an authentic human being masquerading someone masquerading as someone who doesn't mean, doesn't believe stuff. i mean, that's that's as baseline , that's that's as a baseline, like being a human being is a question. >> well, some of the performers that we've had to work with, some you're not quite sure that they're real. >> yeah. some you want >> yeah. some of them, you want to into the sea. to roll back into the sea. that's not that's not a good analogy here. please >> yeah, right. >> yeah, right. >> let's have a quick sprint through monday's front pages. >> we have the times mental health. >> uh oh. mental ill health. driving okay. i was thinking that you were driving on. anyway. you shouldn't do that surge in disability claims. guardian top tory says party faces obliteration in election. the mirror together we must end this horror now they are news. uh, ministers urged to act as flood risk lingers for thousands. metro post office victims will get justice. the
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star. oh, snowballs . big freeze star. oh, snowballs. big freeze is on the way and those we are front pages . sir leo, we are front pages. sir leo, we are going to kick off with monday's guardian. >> so the guardian , uh, has >> so the guardian, uh, has topped tories. his party faces obliteration in election . obliteration in election. >> that's danny kruger. just saying what we all know. but obviously the guardian are revelling in it. and the other story got a channel story they've got is a channel 4th cut 200 staff after ad 4th may cut 200 staff after ad income falls . income falls. >> so channel 4 sounds so gleeful. yeah, i mean gleeful, but also like, you know, i hope it never i don't want i don't want this clip to be taken, you know, and then used against me in a few years time. >> always sad when people >> it's always sad when people lose we lose jobs. obviously we know it's well, which it depends it's not well, which it depends on who does it. hitler. okay you're right. when he lost his job, a good day. good job, that was a good day. good day. anyone else ? day. uh, anyone else? >> about the post >> uh, what about the post office women? the women who ran the post office? yeah. office women? the women who ran the okay. )ffice? yeah. office women? the women who ran the okay. fairz? yeah. office women? the women who ran the okay. fair enough. all right, >> okay. fair enough. all right, so sad that so let's say it's sad that people work similar
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people who work in a similar industry hitler. industry who aren't hitler. >> well, they're not that far away from hitler. >> they work for channel 4. so >> they work for channel 4. so >> so all read the >> so they all read the guardian. all, know, guardian. they're all, you know, sort islington hitler isms. sort of islington hitler isms. yeah. there are all sort yeah. there are all these sort of overeducated, uh , you know, of overeducated, uh, you know, incestuous, milquetoast who, you know, project their values onto the rest of us. >> i'm here. leo. >> they've they've, uh, undergone a rapid expansion in recent with staff numbers recent years with staff numbers swelling to a record level of more than so they've got more than 1200. so they've got a wage bill of more than £108 million year. there's an million a year. there's been an advertising crash tv , tv advertising crash for tv, tv advertising, and so they've got to slash 200 roles. their content budget is and they're going to have to make deep cuts to their to their content budget, which is £700 million. so expect to see lots of very cheaply produced shows on channel 4, except don't expect to see them. everybody's watching stuff. are watching other stuff. people are watching gb news, they're watching gb news, they're watching , which is watching netflix, which is a content budget of $17 billion, and youtube has revenue of $30 billion. and that's that's going
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up every year. so i mean isn't. >> so i was going to say louis. yeah partly yes. it's advertising thing. partly yeah i mean it's ridiculous that they've sort of inflated their workforce to this level, but also how much of it do you think is them just making bad programmes? >> well , i programmes? >> well, i don't programmes? >> well , i don't know because >> well, i don't know because i never watch channel 4. i don't even know. then maybe i don't know if if it's good or know if it's if it's good or bad. they've done bad. i do know that they've done they've up these they've basically set up these satellite around the satellite offices around the country and leeds and glasgow or, you know, manchester for to so that if they do cut people's, uh, jobs , those local people are uh, jobs, those local people are going to lose their jobs. it's the exact same thing that they do in america when they build a b—1 bomber. is they put a little money into every single congressional that congressional district so that every to every single congressman has to vote it, even though it's vote for it, even though it's even it's boondoggle . even though it's a boondoggle. so that's what sounds like so that's what it sounds like when company that. well, so that's what it sounds like wheeven ompany that. well, so that's what it sounds like wheeven anpany that. well, so that's what it sounds like wheeven a company that. well, so that's what it sounds like wheeven a company when:. well, not even a company when the government does that, it's a boondoggle. well steph's packed lunch 4 because boondoggle. well steph's packed luncwas 4 because boondoggle. well steph's packed luncwas terrible 4 because boondoggle. well steph's packed luncwas terrible . 4 because that was terrible. >> that and that's been >> that was a and that's been that's been actually
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that's been i actually cannot remember programme remember the last programme i watched on channel 4. >> that's right. >> yeah that's terrible right. moving monday's telegraph moving on to monday's telegraph louis telegraph. louis monday's telegraph. >> big news. khan bows to >> uh big news. khan bows to unions over tube strikes . there unions over tube strikes. there are two strikes going on. >> and, uh, and you should explain to people outside of london, we have a, um, a network of trains that go under the ground , and they're called ground, and they're called colloquially the tube. >> right. and it basically 99% of all the train lines in the entire country seem to start in london, end in london. it's all london, end in london. it's all london centric. then london basically . and i'm a londoner. basically. and i'm a londoner. i live in london. i love this place, but i think it sucks the life entire country. life out of the entire country. i i think london is the i think. i think london is the worst thing about britain is that , yeah, worst thing about britain is that, yeah, is the worst thing. maybe maybe the royal family, the there's lots of other the nhs, there's lots of other things that are bad, but but, but the drivers are but so, so the tube drivers are on strike. khan, who is labour, gets money from the tube drivers. so it's kind of hard for him to be a bit objective . for him to be a bit objective. and he actually has the power to quash thing, to say you quash this thing, to say you can't go on strike. didn't they
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change laws ? change the laws? >> were to be closed >> they were going to be closed for . for a week. >> surely that's >> yeah, yeah, surely that's just automate it. >> it's ridiculous . i mean, what >> it's ridiculous. i mean, what do they think they are? junior doctors. this this a doctors. this is this is a nonsense. yet they're doing nonsense. and yet they're doing a robot could do. not a job that a robot could do. not even robot like, even a smart robot like, literally all they've got do literally all they've got to do is sit and press the is sit, sit there and press the button that makes the tube go press the button makes it press the button that makes it stop press the button that stop and press the button that makes doors open. that's stop and press the button that mannly doors open. that's stop and press the button that mannly doctheern. that's stop and press the button that mannly docthey do. that's the only thing they do. >> with louis. >> dealing with louis. >> dealing with louis. >> there's there's not even >> there's no there's not even a steering wheel because you're closing the doors. >> left closing. it's just >> you left closing. it's just like journalist. >> you left closing. it's just like same journalist. >> you left closing. it's just like same button. nalist. the same button. >> you just hold button the same button. >> y0|then hold button the same button. >> y0|then youj button the same button. >> y0|then you take button the same button. >> y0|then you take your)n the same button. >> y0|then you take your finger down. then you take your finger off the button doors closed. >> didn't that. >> okay, i didn't know that. >> okay, i didn't know that. >> mean, more >> but yeah, i mean, the more that these and these that they push these and these strikes and the people just that they push these and these striketornd the people just that they push these and these striketornd going, people just that they push these and these striketornd going, you're ple just have to be going, you're getting paid. find out how paid. and when we find out how much they're actually getting paid as a paid three times as much as a junior doctor. yeah, it's totally insane. look fair totally insane. look and fair do's for getting do's to the unions for getting them yeah but at the them that money. yeah but at the same time you're like, come on now. now you're taking the mickey. >> and also i mean london >> yeah. and also i mean london sadiq the tfl. they're sadiq khan the tfl. they're desperately short of money
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because uh because of because of uh because of lockdown uh which khan lockdown uh which obviously khan sadiq back. we really need sadiq khan back. we really need a change of change of leadership in london. we need a new mayor because sadiq khan is in the pocket of the unions. so he's obviously to just, you obviously going to just, you know, money that he know, splash money that he doesn't have over, over these drivers who don't deserve it. >> i mean, what do you think the chances very quickly, before chances are very quickly, before we on, how go . we move on, how does khan go. because, you know, labour, uh, sort of dominates london elections generally as long as he's labour candidate, he seems like he's a shoo in. >> well, labour have done a great job of importing people into london who vote into into london who vote laboun into into london who vote labour. i mean that's you know, for all that they say like oh everybody, we should open everybody, we should have open borders, everybody come borders, everybody should come here because it's the altruistic thing to do, really, what they want they're want to do. uh, what they're doing importing voters . and doing is importing voters. and now london, now that white now that london, now that white british a minority british people are in a minority in london, is harder, uh, to get people who aren't labour. but people in who aren't labour. but i sadiq khan everybody i think sadiq khan everybody everybody sick him. everybody is sick of him. everybody every uber driver i speak to is sick of him, is sick
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of all the ulez nonsense. uh, and shaun bailey last and i think shaun bailey last time round, uh, everybody thought bailey was, was thought shaun bailey was, was going terribly and going to do terribly and actually really well. actually did really well. so this round, think , i this time round, i think, i think to have think we're going to have another and this time another surprise. and this time it actually go over it could actually go over the line we line and dethrone, uh, can we will . will see right. >> what are the times going >> and what are the times going with anneliese? >> times have got mental >> so the times have got mental ill health driving surge in disability claims. so the cost of the benefit to the taxpayer is set to rise 50% amid warnings the bill is out of control. and this this rankles with me because when you think of disability benefit , you because when you think of disability benefit, you think of, you know, somebody who can't, you know, use their arms or like that. so they or something like that. so they get, you know, know, get, you know, a, you know, a monkey to roll cigarettes for them don't them or whatever it is. i don't know the know what you get in the government. it's probably, uh, a robot or something uh, robot or something now, but, uh, but the forecast that the, the bill disability benefits is bill for disability benefits is going to up to £48 billion going to go up to £48 billion a yean going to go up to £48 billion a year, which is just insane. and is being driven by mental health. so depression and anxiety city and i'm sorry, but
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if you've got depression, anxiety like you can still work. most people who work, in fact, if you work, you're probably more likely to be depressed and anxious because you've got to go to work. >> i'm depressed anxious. >> i'm depressed and anxious. that's state. you're that's my base state. you're depressed, that's my base state. you're depresyeah, she's coming. news. yeah, she's coming. >> come and get a job as a as a headunen >> so that's where i'm working at. but you know what this is where you're wrong. because. because where you're wrong. because. becau problem. and the reason major problem. and the reason it's growing is because of the kinds of foods that we're eating, are carb, eating, which are high carb, high you high carbohydrate foods. and you can a shot at home. >> everybody. yeah. uh, the >> everybody. yeah. uh, but the fact that i'd never read before was how the depression anxiety is now going be the lead is now going to be the lead thing of this bill. yeah thing cause of this bill. yeah that crazy. yeah i mean, that seems crazy. yeah i mean, not no pun. >> we need to roll it back and, like, whatever, whatever the things 1970s, things were in the 1970s, you know, when you had to be, like, properly disabled , like properly disabled, like physically to get physically disabled to, to get this , you know, can't just this, you know, you can't just be also those were be because but also those were the days. the good old days. >> really easy to fake, >> it was really easy to fake, you turn up to the you know, you turn up to the doctor's, i'm anxious. >> to test >> how are they going to test that? i mean? i'm
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that? you know what i mean? i'm depressed. yeah it's your depressed. like, yeah, it's your word you word against his. and then you get these benefits you get all these benefits and you know, if you, know, you get that's if you, that's actually ask for it. >> i went to my doctor about five ago i changed >> i went to my doctor about fivediet ago i changed >> i went to my doctor about fivediet aglooked i changed my diet and looked amazing. >> enough now that >> right. that's enough now that they they just they just gave me, they just gave didn't, they said they >> i didn't, they said they said to me, louis, look depressed to me, louis, you look depressed and they me a prescription and they gave me a prescription for citalopram, pram or whatever. >> being a louis schaefer fan might be a sign of mental illness, anyway illness, i don't know. anyway yeah, a second to yeah, come back in a second to find all the fantastic find out all the fantastic stories we have stories that we have
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i can't if we cut taxes, how on earth are we going to improve those ? those? >> welcome back to headliners i'm josh howie i'm still here. leo kearse is still here. and most importantly , monday's most importantly, monday's papers are still here. louis schaefer is also here. anyway, let's kick off leo with monday's guardian as rishi sunak plans to exonerate a bunch of people who are innocent anyway. that's very nice of him. >> yeah, so post office operators whose lives have been ruined by the horizon scandal could exonerated under plans
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could be exonerated under plans being considered by the government. rishi sunak has said . this follows national outcry . this follows a national outcry over the treatment of post office staff. uh due to this, the faulty accounting software that made money disappear so it looked like they'd stolen it. so loads of them, i think 700 of them were accused and loads of them were accused and loads of them were accused and loads of them were prosecuted . uh, and it them were prosecuted. uh, and it led to i mean, it was horrific , led to i mean, it was horrific, led to i mean, it was horrific, led to i mean, it was horrific, led to four suicides and obviously, uh, reputations ruined and, you know, people losing their jobs. ruined and, you know, people losing their jobs . and these are losing their jobs. and these are these are people, you know, stalwart uh, so although it community. uh, so although it would be funny if one of them had been nicking money and like, would be funny if one of them had know,�*|icking money and like, would be funny if one of them had know, hey ng money and like, would be funny if one of them had know, hey ,g money and like, would be funny if one of them had know, hey , hey, ney and like, would be funny if one of them had know, hey , hey, well,nd like, would be funny if one of them had know, hey , hey, well, this ke, you know, hey, hey, well, this was the time to do it. yeah i wasn't just, you know, you should have, should have. you should have, uh, on that uh, stuck the glue on that envelope for that birthday card down like joan rivers down a bit like the joan rivers joke . joke. >> really? e“ joke. >> really? that there >> oh, really? is that there must been someone died must have been someone who died in nine, 11. who other people were happy about. >> oh, okay. >> oh, okay. >> well. >> well. >> or was going to commit suicide that that day? it was probably . probably. >> let's get back.
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>> let's get back. >> oh yeah. we should get back to this. uh, so the get back to this tragedy of 9/11 for later guys. >> yeah . >> yeah. >> yeah. >> not peak too soon with >> it's not peak too soon with our 9/11. >> yeah, more than 700 branch >> so yeah, more than 700 branch managers handed managers were wrongly handed criminalthis insane . you'd >> and this is insane. you'd think these numbers, think with these numbers, you know, just look at know, would nobody just look at this just sort of, this and just done a sort of, you sense level you know, common sense level thing? seems an thing? well that seems to be an awful post office branch awful lot of post office branch managers. maybe. maybe there's something else. and even after they errors with the they discovered errors with the software, still software, they were still prosecuting people. this is how, you know, gunked up and bureaucrat this country is. we need to slash. need a javier need to slash. we need a javier milei to come in and slash all this stuff. it's ridiculous. >> lewis was why is rishi sunak why have they not just immediately overturned these 700 prosecutors, supposedly 93 convictions be overturned , 23 convictions be overturned, 23 have received compensation. >> this is out of 700 people. and now only now he's going. and by the the other thing by the way, the other thing i want to say is, and lewis is right, actual right, this is an actual question do you question to you. yes do you think that this is an indictment on press this country? on the press in this country? the an itv the fact is, it takes an itv show. yes it has been covered
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over last years, but not over the last few years, but not to and the tragedy to the scale and the tragedy that it's what that it deserves. and it's what now this has been going on for 20 years. think it's that's 20 years. i think it's i, that's a, the best question. a, that's the best question. >> is it press. no there's >> is it the press. no there's something this something very deep about this country that the people have no energy. the people are dead. and they need to complain. those 700 people should have been riots ing. but the relatives of the 700 people should have been rioting for the 700. there's something missing. that's why i've been sent here. god has sent me to britain to do what you say to. to basically scream and shout about this. it's, you know, it's like it's like i said, it's like the it's like that hsbc, whatever the banking scandal they're like scandal where they're like charging people £35 for a slightly thing, which slightly overdrawn thing, which they knew was illegal. and yet in order for you to get money, you've got to make a complaint and ask about it. i want to add to this. >> going f“ p“ t-— >> we're going to move on to the next but i want to say >> we're going to move on to the nextthing but i want to say >> we're going to move on to the nextthing that i want to say >> we're going to move on to the nextthing that i'veant to say >> we're going to move on to the nextthing that i've been say one thing that i've been following this for a few years now. never now. the thing that i never realised is realised until this article is that the office massively
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that the post office massively profited the profited from this because the people accused had to people who were accused had to pay people who were accused had to pay all this missed money pay back all this missed money to them. so the post office made loads of wow , it's an insane. i loads of wow, it's an insane. i mean, the levels of it just keep. >> i think if they if they if they exonerate those people, i think it will set a, a bad example other people example to other people who deserve exonerated . deserve to be exonerated. >> yeah, louis right. >> yeah, louis is right. >> yeah, louis is right. >> should been . >> people should have been. people kicking people should have been kicking up this. don't up a stink about this. don't accept it. like we saw that dunng accept it. like we saw that during lockdown everyone's during lockdown. everyone's like, should. like, oh, the government should. we've this mask and we've got to wear this mask and sit like, why sit in our homes. it's like, why are that? are you doing that? >> kicking up a >> but they were kicking up a fuss they have and that's fuss and they have and that's how but it took took how it but it took that took people spending life people spending their life savings point. people spending their life sav they point. people spending their life sav they should point. people spending their life sav they should they point. people spending their life sav they should they should nt. >> they should they should have been should have had people been they should have had people by with a, with been they should have had people bjsawn with a, with been they should have had people bjsawn off with a, with been they should have had people bjsawn off shotgun with a, with been they should have had people bjsawn off shotgun demanding helicopter. >> okay. you've by saying you shouldn't sawn off shotguns. >> you took it a bit too far. >> you took it a bit too far. >> louis, who are monday's independent? throwing a bone to? >> well, this is the tories. tories choose partner of disgraced ex—mp peter bone to fight an election a by—election to replace him. this is up.
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they're not even up there that far. it's up there in, in in walling borough. i think that's it's like the flat area around there. no one ever visits that around there. and then what happened was, is this guy peter bone, we don't know whether this is not, but they is true or not, but they basically kicked him out of for office hitting young office hitting on some young kid. 71 years old, kid. but he was a 71 years old, so to anyway. so more power to him anyway. anyway well, but when you're 67, you don't have the energy just that he he repeatedly that he was he repeatedly physically struck and threw things. >> now he's saying that he didn't. is what the didn't. but this is what the independent expert panel. >> what. you can't believe >> what. well, you can't believe it. are the same people it. these are the same people who the office who supported the post office debacle . but the point. debacle. but here's the point. can make my point? my point can i make my point? my point is, is what's weird is, they is, is what's weird is, is they don't like him, but they've but they've basically chosen his wife run. it's like if his wife to run. it's like if his partner, when a dictator , when partner, when a dictator, when you know imelda, when marcos goes away and imelda and philippines probably don't know what can you tell us the reason why they've chosen they've chosen him because they're afraid run as afraid that he's going to run as an which going afraid that he's going to run as an siphon which going afraid that he's going to run as an siphon away h going
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afraid that he's going to run as an siphon away from joing afraid that he's going to run as an siphon away from the; to siphon votes away from the tories tories are going tories and the tories are going to totally election, to totally lose the election, even had an 18,000 even though they had an 18,000 vote time. vote majority. the last time. and the is, it's true and the truth is, it's true because fed up with because people are fed up with the fake tories . the fake tories. >> leo, is this a sign? i mean, he's basically holding them to ransom . is this a sign of how ransom. is this a sign of how weak sunak is? >> yeah, possibly. and also, i mean, mr boone has denied has always denied the allegations . i always denied the allegations. i think he's like one of those postmasters i think. >> you get that sean >> yeah you get that sean shotgun out. yeah. fair enough . shotgun out. yeah. fair enough. all right. express now and leo starmer concerned about starmer is very concerned about threats mps . and that's threats to mps. and that's before has done before labour has even done anything . anything yet. >> keir starmer >> yeah. so sir keir starmer admits he's very concerned about threats to over the threats to mps over the israel—gaza war. so labour mps have been offered beefed up security direct security advice following direct threats since the israel—hamas war began in october. and obviously starmer has been quite staunch in his support for israel, whereas , you know, a lot israel, whereas, you know, a lot of his a lot of his politicians, the local level and mps have been have been criticising , you been have been criticising, you know, calling for a ceasefire,
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criticising israel . uh, there criticising israel. uh, there has also been, um, threats directed against labour mps and vandalism at their offices. and i think there homes as well. but l, i think there homes as well. but i, i don't have any sympathy for labour mps because they're all like, oh, we need open borders. oh, we should have mass immigration from the, from the middle like, well , middle east. it's like, well, you've got it now. you've brought these attitudes in and now the well, now you're reaping the well, okay, is okay, so maybe this is historically the true. >> they're >> but that's not what they're saying do you saying nowadays. what do you mean? is they're mean? what i mean is they're quite clear about their fact that to control that they want to control migration . migration. >> well, bit like quote. >> well, it's a bit like quote. well, okay. >> that's what i'm saying. >> so that's what i'm saying. so historically the point historically but the point is they're not still saying let everybody in or like everybody in or anything like that people. that at that time people. >> they never said, they >> but they never said, they never let everybody in. never said let everybody in. >> right about this. >> leo is right about this. douglas murray. >> douglas was warning us >> douglas murray was warning us about you decades about this, you know, decades ago. know, people ago. yeah. but you know, people people being people accused him of being racist or islamophobic. >> worry about this, blair >> worry about this, tony blair was this. was concerned about this. and also tony blair was the architect of this. well, well, but at the same time he was also writing about this stuff 20 years ago, they to
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years ago, saying they need to control their immigration, they need to redo the immigration. >> until october the 7th. >> he was until october the 7th. >> he was until october the 7th. >> you were in favour of mass immigration? afraid of immigration? i wasn't afraid of mass immigration? i wasn't afraid of ma i; favour control >> i was in favour of control immigration. and i was in favour of you know . yeah. what of very, you know. yeah. what i was in favour of was the fact that people from certain countries having the right to asylum here. yeah. legitimately but i, but i always said that. yes it's been exploited. and to be fair, you have you have enlightened me more to that. but this is a serious issue here because we have a democracy, we have the ability to disagree with each other. but when you're protesting outside people's homes, anneliese home, when you also have, uh, the golders green mp, um, mike freer, his office was, uh, he had threats and then his office mysteriously goes on place. now, that hasn't investigation hasn't concluded yet. yeah. but i mean , there's yet. yeah. but i mean, there's easy to make a link. >> david amess, jo cox , you >> david amess, jo cox, you know, with a history of politicians being attacked and killed, it's not it's not even question. >> the truth is there's a war going on. there's a couple of
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wars the left and wars going on with the left and right but we've also had right war. but we've also had this this , this, um, this mass this this, this, um, this mass immigration. people from a different culture are moving into this country. it's not even it's in america's melting pot where people move together and what they're having now is multi multinational ism. no, no. >> you're right. thank you very much, louis, for stating the case. why you shouldn't have been to the been let in. moving on to the mail. this been let in. moving on to the mail. would this been let in. moving on to the mail. would be this been let in. moving on to the mail. would be betterthis been let in. moving on to the mail. would be better spent just money would be better spent just bribing people not to come . bribing people not to come. >> yeah , maybe. maybe on >> well, yeah, maybe. maybe on bullets to prevent them from reaching the border. deporting you? >> what are you talking about? you can't say that. >> can't i say that ? what? >> why can't i say that? what? >> why can't i say that? what? >> bullets. what what are >> bullets. what? what what are they to do with those they going to do with those bullets? they going to do with those bulwell, guarantee you, in >> well, i guarantee you, in every part of every border and every part of the people have the world, the people have bullets the police have the world, the people have bullets in the police have the world, the people have bullets in theirolice have the world, the people have bullets in their guns. 1ave the world, the people have bullets in their guns. live the world, the people have bullets in their guns. i imagine our police have bullets. and i don't don't don't think they do. i don't think they i don't think think they do. and i don't think theyi think they do. and i don't think they i don't think what they're doing enough. doing is setting up enough. deporting illegal. i'm not in favour people , but i favour of killing people, but i am saying thank you. >> finally for saying that out
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there. >> i'm not in favour of killing people, but every police policeman in america carries gun. >> it doesn't mean they're in favour people. favour of killing people. but it means people means when they when people break law, there has as means when they when people b|deterrent, w, there has as means when they when people b|deterrent, deporte has as means when they when people b|deterrent, deport illegal as a deterrent, deport illegal immigrants from the uk set to cost the taxpayer 2 billion over the years. the next seven years. >> what they they what's >> what they what they what's happened office happened is, is the home office put out procurement contract put out a procurement contract asking bidders on this asking for bidders on this seven. excuse me , $2 billion, seven. excuse me, $2 billion, 700 million and 700,000 a day plan to ship people overseas and to put them up in hotels. and that's how much it's going to cost $2 billion over the next seven just part of seven years. that's just part of it. not even the it. that's that's not even the processing fees. that's just the actual, guess, hard work actual, i guess, the hard work doesn't include rwanda. >> yeah. leo, iain >> so, yeah. leo, sir, sir iain duncan smith, he said this is ridiculous and the money should just be spent earlier down the line, i.e. to process the people. so we're not having to then get rid later. then get rid of them later. >> but that's not i mean, this whole thing works on incentives. if there's still an incentive for people to come, they're still in still going to come in
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unsustainable numbers. and it's sad you know, obviously sad because, you know, obviously a people want a lot of people just want to come better life for come and make a better life for themselves. meet many themselves. and you meet so many people you know, people who are, you know, really, you know, feel them, feel of britain feel themselves part of britain and economy and contribute to the economy and contribute to the economy and rest of it. but, and all the rest of it. but, you know, people are know, also a lot of people are coming uh, know, coming in who, uh, you know, who basically western basically hate western civilisation and, you know, and want to want to kill us. we've seen terrorist attacks. we've seen, we've seen the seen, you know, we've seen the attacks on labour mps. attacks on on labour mps. we were talking about, uh, so , were just talking about, uh, so, i the money i mean, this money, the money for , the good thing is it for rwanda, the good thing is it doesn't really it's not new money. our money. it comes out of our foreign when we, foreign aid budget. so when we, you know, we're talking about this money being spent, it's not coming from us. it just means, you people in world you know, people in third world countries helped out. countries won't be helped out. >> yes they will. they will suffer out the most. >> they'll suffer because >> so they'll suffer because because left insists on because the left insists on having borders and iain having open borders and iain duncan smith's idea of pro assessing people. so that that doesn't remove the incentive . doesn't remove the incentive. yeah. because if you process people and they can stay then. >> no, no. but i think he's meaning process them to remove them they're coming in.
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them as they're coming in. >> there's way >> yeah. but maybe there's a way maybe it's just simplification >> yeah. but maybe there's a way mryou it'sjust simplification >> yeah. but maybe there's a way mryou peoplet simplification >> yeah. but maybe there's a way mryou people . simplification >> yeah. but maybe there's a way mryou people . i simplification >> yeah. but maybe there's a way mryou people . i don't.ification >> yeah. but maybe there's a way mryou people . i don't caretion >> yeah. but maybe there's a way mryou people . i don't care what of you people. i don't care what this is not my country. if you want to in everybody and want to let in everybody and destroy your destroy the place, that's your business. destroy the place, that's your businto ;. destroy the place, that's your businto stop people from coming. done to stop people from coming. the what do you either the what you do is you either build which think walls build walls, which i think walls are or you take are failures or or you take aggressive action by invading their countries and making sure that they , they wow . okay that they, they cannot wow. okay >> is this going to be the future labour policy? >> thank you so much, liz. >> thank you so much, liz. >> well, it's got to be it's got to be some what is the matter with people out there? with the people out there? it's so so simple . so simple. it's so simple. >> it just bullets and invade countries. thank you lewis for that. countries. thank you lewis for tha and whatever you need okay. >> and whatever you need okay. >> and whatever you need okay. >> for making it to >> well done for making it to the halfway point, which we'll see rewarded in the see you amply rewarded in the next section with barton next section with joey barton unleashed jodie foster unleashed, jodie foster unleashed, jodie foster unleashed unleashed unleashed and children unleashed . he'll make sense.
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>> it has started. but there's a generation in between who've been corrupted by it. and i hope that they can come out of this. >> really? >> really? >> welcome back to headline is straight into the telegraph. leo
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with a story about gaza. i mean , with a story about gaza. i mean, tower hamlets, you wouldn't know seeing the flags around there. >> so the east london borough , >> so the east london borough, uh, has been accused of criminal offences over palestinian flags . offences over palestinian flags. tower hamlets, led by controversial mayor lutfur rahman, is accused by lawyers of failing to remove the flag stickers and posters that show the palestinian uh flag . and the palestinian uh flag. and yeah, this is this is ridiculous. i mean, going down to bethnal green and going down to bethnal green and going down to tower hamlets, you see, it's like every lamppost has got a palestinian flag on it. and it's like, know, you know, like, you know, and you know, for that all the for a fact that all all the people these people that are putting these palestinian would be, palestinian flags up would be, would they were would be crying if they were union saying, this is union jack saying, this is racist . british is racist. the british flag is everywhere. like it's like everywhere. it's like it's like some sort of nazi regime. it's insane. know, is insane. i don't know, this is this uh, english soil. as this is, uh, english soil. as a scotsman, don't go around, this is, uh, english soil. as a scotsstickingion't go around, this is, uh, english soil. as a scotssticking the: go around, this is, uh, english soil. as a scotssticking the: go arouflag like, sticking the scottish flag on lamppost . on every every lamppost. >> and it's also acts as that. there's like there's stickers which are like saying intifada. there's stickers which are like sayi intifada intifada. there's stickers which are like sayi intifada , intifada. there's stickers which are like sayi intifada , uh, intifada. there's stickers which are like sayi intifada , uh, which ifada. there's stickers which are like sayi intifada , uh, which fora. the intifada, uh, which for jewish a lot a lost jewish people a lot a lost whether you're israeli or not, know people who died in bombs and whatnot. so it's
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intimidating to the jewish residents and the area . uh, and residents and the area. uh, and but would you mind just describing the there's a it's funny because these lawyers, they found this like law and that's what they're hoping to get them on because it's council property. so because they are the occupier, they own the land that has all flags and that has all these flags and stuff. that's how they're trying to sort nimbyism . to get them sort of nimbyism. >> so, yeah. so they're >> yeah. so, so yeah. so they're using i but that's using i mean but that's, that's how know, everything how you know, everything works using little using some, you know, little note in the, in the law to, to get to move but get them to to, move them. but it nuts. how you know, it is it is nuts. how you know, we just talking about uh, we were just talking about uh, culture was coming over to to, the uk tower hamlets the uk and tower hamlets basically has just transplanted, you know, entirely this, this culture. look for ram and the borough's mayor had previously been barred from public office for corruption for five years, but he served his five year ban, and now he's back in people. people like, you know. people aren't like, you know. no, keep this guy out. no, let's keep this guy out. >> what's interesting no, let's keep this guy out. >> that what's interesting no, let's keep this guy out. >> that is what's interesting no, let's keep this guy out. >> that is heiat's interesting no, let's keep this guy out. >> that is heiat's inaway ing no, let's keep this guy out. >> that is heiat's inaway from about that is he broke away from laboun about that is he broke away from labour. yeah. there is such labour. yeah. and there is such a dominance of the, uh, muslim vote that that . yeah, he was
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vote that that. yeah, he was able to do that and win . are we able to do that and win. are we going to see more of this , going to see more of this, louis, do you think of these kind voter enclaves ? kind of voter enclaves? >> um, i think a bright people breaking away for labour. >> yeah. >> yeah. >> i mean, if mass immigration continues . yes. the whole the continues. yes. the whole the whole america , as i said, is whole america, as i said, is multi is multi is melting pot. we're a little bit a little bit, a little bit. you got a soup and you add little bits of this. it's a soup. it's still you add little bits of this. it's kind a soup. it's still you add little bits of this. it's kind of;oup. it's still you add little bits of this. it's kind of soupit's still you add little bits of this. it's kind of soup thattill the kind of soup that you remember but time it remember. but over time maybe it changes for the better because it's something different. but changes for the better because it's s
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in, you know, right now it's right now it's an extreme minority , but it's not that minority, but it's not that extreme because the numbers are extreme because the numbers are extreme minority. i mean , extreme minority. i mean, they're minority. there are we're talking millions extreme in terms of ideology . extreme in terms of ideology. extreme just like in small. >> but we're talking millions of people. and if you want to talk about a minority, i think there's 400,000 jews in britain. >> so it's less than that, less than that, 200,000. >> so it's less than that, less tha some. 200,000. >> so it's less than that, less tha some have.000. >> so it's less than that, less tha some have left. >> so it's less than that, less tha some have left since i did >> some have left since i did that poll. but uh, but yeah. so i mean, we're jews really are a tiny and they seem to tiny minority and they seem to be ones who are being be the ones who are being oppressed and being attacked and having all this, like, vehement hate directed at them. and these flags in tower hamlets are an example that hate and other. example of that hate and other. inoficed example of that hate and other. i noticed there's another london borough, was it redbridge? borough, uh, was it redbridge? i can't remember another another one east london that actually one in east london that actually went council out went out. the council went out and the flags down and took the flags down themselves. tower themselves. so yeah, tower hamlets should, should do, let's move hamlets should, should do, let's mobut absolutely. >> but yeah, absolutely. it seems for the seems like rules for the palestinian activists, one rule for them, one rule for everybody else. just not fair,
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else. and that's just not fair, right? son louis, uh, right? monday's son louis, uh, and it seems like someone's mad as hell isn't going to take it anymore. >> well, this is joey barton, and, uh, who was who's a football player? i know who the guy is. and he used to play for manchester he goes manchester united. and he goes on rant on another vile sexist rant accusing female pundits of using sexuality to get an advantage. this is one of the most. this is a zero story. in the midst of a non—story. basically, they're mad at him for accusing non—named pundits for getting their jobs through sex. non—named pundits for getting theirjobs through sex. but non—named pundits for getting their jobs through sex. but we don't know who these. it's hard to make an accusation if you how you go. >> by the way , we should cut to >> by the way, we should cut to this photo that you have up now and you got your job. >> well , no, job. >> well, no, this has nothing. >> well, no, this has nothing. >> this has nothing to do with it. there's andrew doyle. i'm just a fan of andrew doyle. there's nothing, there's nothing. >> just a coincidence, is what you're saying. >> there's nothing on on toured. >> there's nothing on on toured. >> i think andrew's boyfriend watches this. >> so i'm a big of andrew's >> so i'm a big fan of andrew's boyfriend as well. okay >> okay. not.
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>> that's okay. that's not. that's not. >> examine that any further. >> examine that any further. >> know what? big >> and you know what? i'm a big fan yours. fan of yours. >> josh, not that >> josh, let's not put that photo so handsome young man. photo up so handsome young man. >> disagree with in that. >> i disagree with you in that. and hopefully , maybe leo, you and hopefully, maybe leo, you might agree with me . uh, and hopefully, maybe leo, you might agree with me. uh, this diatribe he's supposedly going on and the newspaper. it's ironic. the sun, by the way, calling yeah. um, calling him sexist. yeah. um, because it seems like really, he's talking about meritocracy. he's essentially said on he's also essentially said on twitter or whatever it's called now, ex uh, you know what? i'm just going to speak the truth now, had of now, i've had enough of this woke. yeah plava. and he seems to be really calling out. he seems know what talking seems to know what he's talking about he's 2 million about, and he's got 2 million followers they're followers and they're going, yeah, ridiculous . yeah, this is ridiculous. >> yeah. i mean, he's really got a this the a point. and this, this is the trouble because, he's sort trouble because, uh, he's sort of he's really got a of he's got he's really got a point, being polite point, but he's not being polite about it. and he's also going in for, you know, personal attacks sometimes. so a lot which are sometimes. so a lot of which are very, funny . and, know, very, very funny. and, you know, i'm funny . i'm very, very funny. and, you know, i'm funny. i'm really i'm really funny. i'm really enjoying those one he got. he got attacked by i can't remember who perkins or who it was marina perkins or something. and
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something. yeah. yeah and he just like a £10 in just replied being like a £10 in your tip jar so you can get your roots done. and it's just like this level of, uh, hilarious brutality. but obviously, you know, of politeness is know, the lack of politeness is really the, uh, you really offending the, uh, you know, the woke mob who insist that everybody treat each other with with politeness, when with with politeness, even when they're when they're, you know, calling for the genocide of israel whatever . but yeah, israel or whatever. but yeah, he's obviously , you know, he's he's obviously, you know, people use their sexuality to, to get an advantage. everything he says has got like least. to get an advantage. everything he but has got like least. to get an advantage. everything he but how got like least. to get an advantage. everything he but how ist like least. to get an advantage. everything he but how is thise least. to get an advantage. everything he but how is this a least. to get an advantage. everything he but how is this a story, ;t. to get an advantage. everything he but how is this a story, how >> but how is this a story, how was story? there's was this a story? there's something you. there's something i'll tell you. there's a story, louis. >> this i believe a >> this is why i believe it's a story. he's example >> this is why i believe it's a st(one he's example >> this is why i believe it's a st(one of he's example >> this is why i believe it's a st(one of the he's example >> this is why i believe it's a st(one of the dam; example >> this is why i believe it's a st(one of the dam breaking|ple of one of the dam breaking against the diversity inclusion stuff. against what? the trans ideology. all the stuff that's been building for years now where sensible people have had enough and said, you know what? someone penis is not a someone with a penis is not a woman. and shouldn't be sports and all the other stuff that comes with it. now, i don't agree everything agree with everything that he says, people says, but this is people speaking voice now. people speaking their voice now. people are speaking and saying what they think, and i hardly think i
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feel like people been feel like people have been living for years. living in fear now for years. yeah. now i feel like the dam. >> but has he named the name? >> but has he named the name? >> has he named? has joanne smith? she uses a sexuality the sexuality thing, but he's named the names with the football commentators. >> and know that these >> and we all know that these players, in every, every aspect of life, it's not just football commentating , but they're, you commentating, but they're, you know, a lot of time they know, a lot of the time they can't the and they're not selected. >> yes, yes selected. >> yes, selected. » yes, >> yes, yes yes yes yes yes. >> but that that's not this story. story is he said story. this story is he said there's somebody working out there. >> fine. but this is part of the greater whole right. uh, monday, saint um , no, not we've saint louis, um, no, not we've all the uh, are all done the sun. uh, we are going the times . going to move on to the times. and, uh, leo, female presenters at the bbc. is it going to work? so five female bbc news presenters who were sidelined in march as part of a merger, are expected to be given new jobs in the coming they've the coming months, but they've all pay for nearly the coming months, but they've a|year. pay for nearly a year. >> while this row was sorted out. they've been doing nothing and getting paid hundreds of thousands and this thousands of pounds and this whole thing, this messy merger of bbc's domestic and
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of the bbc's domestic and foreign channel, is foreign news channel, is supposed to money, but supposed to save money, but their, you know, their top talent allegedly are just sitting on their couches at home doing nothing and getting paid hundreds of thousands of pounds from licence fee . and i from the licence fee. and i think ridiculous . it shows, think it's ridiculous. it shows, you blatant mismanagement you know, blatant mismanagement of like, why are we of the bbc and like, why are we paying? not we because i paying? well not we because i don't pay it. but are people don't pay it. but why are people paying don't pay it. but why are people paying fee for this? >> absolutely. and to >> absolutely. and i want to just say one thing. we're going to to the next one to move on to the next one because of because we're running out of time. to say, time. but i just want to say, what's interesting about this article is that article in the times is that the actual the headline, and the match the headline, and the headune headline essentially says they're their they're about to get their new jobs then when they're about to get their new jobs read then when they're about to get their new jobs read the then when they're about to get their new jobsread the bbc, |en when they're about to get their new jobsread the bbc, it] when they're about to get their new jobsread the bbc, it says,n you read on the bbc, it says, yeah, no, they're not going to get their jobs. >> you get their jobs. >> it's like when you get it and it feels to me like a planted story by probably the story by probably one of the connections to the women mentioned article to mentioned in this article to kind hand. kind of force the bbc's hand. >> anyway , yes. well, no kind of force the bbc's hand. >> mail/way , yes. well, no kind of force the bbc's hand. >> mail next. yes. well, no daily mail next. >> louis daily mail, one of your fellow thespians, is complaining about with one of your about working with one of your girlfriend's . girlfriend's generation. >> a she is a kind >> well, she is a she is a kind of like a thespian . is that what of like a thespian. is that what you meant ?
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you meant? >> is that what you meant? like your your your girlfriend? your girlfriend's generation, generation z? >> know what, richard? >> do you know what, richard? >> do you know what, richard? >> actor. >> do you know what, richard? >> yeah. actor. >> do you know what, richard? >> yeah. an actor. :tor. >> do you know what, richard? >> yeah. an actor. ior. >> do you know what, richard? >> yeah. an actor. i know , but >> yeah. an actor. i know, but richard nixon actually accused his competitor in a in a political race of being a thespian , and people didn't know thespian, and people didn't know what that meant, and they voted against her. that's a true story. you can look that up right quick. >> tell the story. >> tell the story. >> so jody foster, she's a 61 year old thespian, an actress, and she she was spoke to the guardian and she basically complained people who are complained about people who are younger her. it just complained about people who are young> it's much easier to just cut and paste bunch of tweets, and paste a bunch of tweets, then some then go out and do some investigative journalism and find , you know, why 700
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find out, you know, why 700 postmasters are going jail . postmasters are going to jail. but yeah, is i mean, but yeah, this is i mean, i guess shows the sign the guess it shows the sign of the times, young people times, you know, young people are entitled and old people don't like it. but then, you know , the young people are know, the young people are saying, well, it's always been this people this way. young people have always been entitled and old people liked it. people have always not liked it. so is just, you know, so maybe it is just, you know, i don't know. >> she was a child actor. yeah. don't know. >> he was a child actor. yeah. don't know. >> i think; a child actor. yeah. don't know. >> i think she:hild actor. yeah. don't know. >> i think she famously'. yeah. don't know. >> i think she famously worked uh, i think she famously worked very, hard. you very, very hard. i can see, you know, bugsy malone or know, in bugsy malone or whatever. i don't think she was rocking yeah. and rocking up at 1030. yeah. and we all i'm tired. i'm all are. i'm a bit tired. i'm going it tomorrow, going to do it tomorrow, i imagine. well, that's child actors. then. were actors. back then. they were up at yeah , but given their >> yeah, but given their barbiturates. yes >> that's the second issue, which is which is it's the fact is there are some people who are supen is there are some people who are super, super hard working and successful and they're always going complain about people going to complain about people who working. so who aren't hard working. and so it's ferguson it's whatever the alex ferguson effect or , or the tom cruise, effect or, or the tom cruise, there's always those who there's always those people who are over here are top like leo, leo over here working super hard he's or working super hard and he's or josh complaining about louis schaefer and my laziness. >> lazy at all. you're one of the first people here, right? let's go to the final section
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featuring ex—cops fat featuring vigilante ex—cops fat fear who of us three is most fear and who of us three is most a neanderthal? i see you there
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now, -- now, i think you're next. norman lewis. anyway, welcome back to headliners and getting down to monday's mirror. leo, for a story about a policeman actually doing job. oh, he's an doing his job. oh, he's an ex—policeman. yeah he's retired, so trouble for doing his so he's in trouble for doing his job when he wasn't actually employed it.
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employed to do it. >> retired cop is furious >> so retired cop is furious after being handed a £130 fine for chasing a shoplifter in car , for chasing a shoplifter in car, uh, in his car. not the shoplifters car. so this is norman brennan, who's 64. he travelled nearly two miles, uh, helping police arrest the thief helping police arrest the thief he had tracked with his car , he had tracked with his car, which he has since been fined from . so he's hit out at the from. so he's hit out at the broken justice system which has given him this fine. he drove the way down a one way the wrong way down a one way street. and so the council have given him this. street. and so the council have given him this . in fairness, it given him this. in fairness, it was at five miles an hour. so you know. no, it wasn't starsky and hutch. the cardboard box, it's called flying. uh, the council. so he's appealed against the against the council, which is the london borough of richmond. upon thames. and they've said you had no legal authority the road. authority to enter the road. it's like he was. he was stopping a shoplifter who stole , stopping a shoplifter who stole, like, all this, all this stuff. nine of wine and posh nine bottles of wine and posh bottles wine well. and bottles of wine as well. and nothing's happened to the shoplifter. nicked stuff shoplifter. he nicked this stuff from just from sainsbury's. this just shows. and be good. shows. don't try and be good. don't try and stop shoplifters
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like you let like the, you know, let sainsbury's take that hit. sainsbury's take that hit. sainsbury's horrible , sainsbury's are a horrible, racist organisation. anyway. they have, you know, uh, separate areas for uh for white separate, um, you know, safe spaces for uh, for ethnic minorities and white people. so they brought back segregate , they brought back segregate, which is a horrific, horrific thing to do . uh, so yeah, thing to do. uh, so yeah, sainsbury's don't help them out. they're bad guys and uh, and. yeah. >> is that true? yeah >> is that true? yeah >> yeah. >> yeah. >> i didn't know that. i thought you were gonna. >> and i believe they're not. they didn't. they chose not to prosecute this. >> the they chose not to prosecute. >> so they don't mind shoplifting . if anything, shoplifting. if anything, this guy make up the £130 fine guy should make up the £130 fine by going down and nicking the same bottles of wine that this shoplifter nicked. same bottles of wine that this sho okay, nicked. same bottles of wine that this shookay, nicke lewis, uh, say >> okay, well, lewis, uh, say that maybe you shouldn't do that. know what you that. i don't know what you want. no, i'm gonna say sainsbury's, some bullets. want. no, i'm gonna say saiino,|ry's, some bullets. want. no, i'm gonna say saiino, i'm, some bullets. want. no, i'm gonna say saiino, i'm gonnaome bullets. want. no, i'm gonna say saiino, i'm gonnaome bullguy >> no, i'm gonna say this guy should be hit with a £130 fine because everybody should be hit with a £130 fine becaus
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way sainsbury's way street. and if sainsbury's doesn't care, if the police don't care , you pretending to don't care, you pretending to care is uncaring. >> it does care. and that's that's the problem. people, people should know just live these atomised lives and not care about anything and just watch the world disintegrate around them. >> know what? you can't >> you know what? you can't do it yourself. the it by yourself. this is the question of our time. you raise a point about a very interesting point about sainsbury's, didn't a very interesting point about sainstum s, didn't a very interesting point about sainstum boycottingiidn't a very interesting point about sainstum boycotting sainsbury's a very interesting point about sainsturtheyycotting sainsbury's a very interesting point about sainsturthey don't|g sainsbury's a very interesting point about sainsturthey don't advertise|ry's a very interesting point about sainsturthey don't advertise on; because they don't advertise on our and you know what? >> you should start shoplifting from sainsbury's. >> and when you mention >> well, and when you mention segregation , don't don't segregation, don't don't shoplift no shoplift from sainsbury's. no and foreigner. i'm on my and i'm a foreigner. i'm on my best behaviour. >> but we've move >> yeah, but we've got to move on. next. lewis don't on. times next. and lewis don't get idea. uh, from get the silly idea. uh, from this article that you're going to start getting paid . to start getting paid. >> are you being paid? >> are you being paid? >> well ? >> well? >> well? >> wait, wait wait. >> wait, wait wait. >> figuratively . yeah, yeah. >> figuratively. yeah, yeah. >> figuratively. yeah, yeah. >> are you being paid ? do you? >> are you being paid? do you? >> are you being paid? do you? >> i mean, what in. >> are you being paid? do you? >> i mean, what in . money are >> i mean, what in. money are you? leo gets paid in sainsbury's vouchers. >> no, you you're being given transport costs to and from the show. i don't get transportation
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costs . why am i even here? i'm costs. why am i even here? i'm not. if i'm not going to get paid. i thought you were here. >> you're here for the fame, aren't you? >> you're here for. >> you're here for. >> like fame everybody >> i like the fame and everybody knows the fame of knows i want the fame of menopausal that's menopausal women. yes, that's very important to me, but. but, i basically pushing i mean, you're basically pushing it my face. you're it in my face. you're humiliating me that don't. humiliating me that i don't. i know what, lewis. >> i know , i know anybody >> i know, i know anybody listening to radio this is going. i know that was a joke. you're leaving. but that's honestly the happiest that i've beenin honestly the happiest that i've been in six months. i was i was, honestly, i was just i was just full of bliss like this was the moment i was free of you. after 20 years. >> oh, josh , i love you, josh. >> oh, josh, i love you, josh. but did i say, did i take that too far? no, no, it was good, it was good, it was good. was it good? no. >> now we're gonna have, like, the saying that comedian the metro saying that a comedian walks off stage. the metro saying that a comedian walgb)ff stage. the metro saying that a comedian walgb news ge. the metro saying that a comedian walgb news the tories gb news >> gb news the tories gb news doesn't comedians .
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doesn't pay comedians. >> doesn't pay a guy who wants bullets deal with immigration bullets to deal with immigration or whatever. right. or whatever. all right. uh, quick. gosh . okay, we're quick. oh, gosh. okay, we're going do very quickly. uh going to do very quickly. uh thank explaining thank you for not explaining that let's move . that story at all. let's move. on. scares are plenty of. now, quickly, do you see fat people in this mail story? >> there have been many people affected by what's happened. >> we've gone no , no, i'm >> oh, we've gone no, no, i'm sorry was one of them. has sorry that was one of them. has not abdicated the throne . not abdicated the throne. >> somebody else is going on strike. >> this philosopher and i think self—described so much in the booth that they pressed the wrong so, yeah, that's >> right. yeah. so, yeah, that's a story before go. a story before we go. >> this philosopher who's >> so this philosopher who's i think she describes herself as a philosopher, i don't think, you know, plato would agree , but she know, plato would agree, but she says being she says that fear of being fat, she likes that's likes pilates. fear that's right. fear of being fat should end. and instead , hospital beds, end. and instead, hospital beds, plane seats and clothes should be made bigger. uh so she's 40 years old. she's in the past. she said that fat is not inherently unhealthy and says that overweight people have nothing to be ashamed of, and that the higher death and
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disease for overweight disease rate for overweight people could merely people could be merely a correlation. now uh, do you want a guess if she's fat or not? >> she's she. >> she's she. >> she's she. >> she used to be a beast, but now she describes herself as being small and fat. but yeah, she says that , uh, you know, she says that, uh, you know, this basically science this basically shows how science is now led ideology. you is now led by ideology. you know, this this idea that, you know, this this idea that, you know uh, is healthy , uh, know, uh, fat is healthy, uh, the, you know, any, any example of it being ill health is just a correlation, a coincidence in 15 seconds. >> louis is this woman a danger? and i'm not just talking about falling people. and i'm not just talking about fallno, people. and i'm not just talking about fallno, think)le. and i'm not just talking about fallno, think she's. i think >> no, i think she's. i think she be right . there's no she could be right. there's no shame being the shame is shame in being fat. the shame is in knowing that the food in not knowing that the food that we eat and drink is made to make us fat. and it's almost a conspiracy of the. >> all right. the show is nearly oven over. >> oven >> let's take another quick look at monday's front pages . we have at monday's front pages. we have the times mental ill health driving surge in disability claims . there it is. we have the claims. there it is. we have the guardian top story says party faces obliteration in election.
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the mirror. together we must end this horror now our news ministers urged to act as flood risk lingers for thousands . the risk lingers for thousands. the metro post office victims will get justice star. oh, snowballs i get justice star. oh, snowballs! big freeze on the way . and those big freeze on the way. and those were your front pages. that is all we have time for. thank you very much to my guests leo kearse and louis schaefer. nick dixon going to be hosting dixon is going to be hosting tomorrow at 11 pm. with cressida and bruce cressida wetton and bruce devlin. if you're watching at 5 pm, for breakfast. p.m, stay tuned for breakfast. thanks joining. p.m, stay tuned for breakfast. thabrighteroining. p.m, stay tuned for breakfast. tha brighter outlook boxt >> brighter outlook with boxt solar sponsors of weather on . gb news. >> hello, i'm marco petagna. here's your latest weather update from the met office. we'll see plenty of fine weather across much the uk in the across much of the uk in the days . some sunshine at days ahead. some sunshine at times, equally a few hazards times, but equally a few hazards to with. of fairly to contend with. all of a fairly wintry with cold air in wintry flavour with cold air in place uk , high place across the uk, high pressure is dominating. sitting towards the and northeast pressure is dominating. sitting torthe s the and northeast pressure is dominating. sitting torthe uk|e and northeast pressure is dominating. sitting torthe uk at and northeast pressure is dominating. sitting torthe uk at the and northeast pressure is dominating. sitting torthe uk at the moment�*theast pressure is dominating. sitting torthe uk at the moment ,heast pressure is dominating. sitting torthe uk at the moment , fairly of the uk at the moment, fairly tightly down tightly packed isobars down towards indicating towards the south, indicating quite breeze . and that's
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quite a brisk breeze. and that's feeding showers in across feeding some showers in across the of england. southern the north of england. southern parts this evening, the north of england. southern parts their this evening, the north of england. southern parts their waythis evening, the north of england. southern parts their way westevening, the north of england. southern parts their way west into ng, the north of england. southern parts their way west into the working their way west into the irish towards the east of irish sea towards the east of northern ireland. as we head into hours of monday, into the early hours of monday, some showers also developing down by down towards the south—east by the morning on monday could give some head some icy stretches as we head into the early of monday into the early hours of monday itself off towards the north and west. cold picture , frost and west. a cold picture, frost and some forming and then some fog forming and then through on ice through the day on monday, ice likely to problem towards likely to be a problem towards the time as the southeast for a time as wintry showers from the wintry showers move in from the east, way east, working their way westwards but turning more to rain as they move across southern england southern counties of england through rest the day on through the rest of the day on monday. towards the monday. whereas towards the north west, apart from the north and west, apart from the odd shower across northern ireland, there'll be plenty of fine store, lots of fine weather in store, lots of sunshine, still chilly sunshine, but still quite chilly temperatures than the temperatures no better than the low figures in low to mid single figures in most promises to most places. tuesday promises to be a much better day, more in the way of sunshine developing after locally foggy after a frosty, locally foggy start. a lot weather start. a lot of dry weather around two lots of sunshine, but again, really again, those temperatures really will . no better will struggle again. no better than to mid single than the low to mid single figures places. highs of figures in most places. highs of around five celsius. around about five celsius. that's fahrenheit as for that's 41 in fahrenheit as for the rest of the week, we'll
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gradually see an increase in cloud north, so cloud from the north, so sunshine becoming more and more confined areas . confined to southern areas. >> that warm feeling inside from boxt boilers sponsors of weather on .
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saving us. this is breakfast with them and holmes and isabel webster here on gb news. >> and here's what's leading the news this morning. a petition calling for the former post office boss, paula vennells, to be stripped of her cbe has surpassed 1 million signatures. following the horizon scandal, revelations are we living in a broken britain strike action? >> fuel costs, migraines ,
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>> fuel costs, migraines, numbers

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