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tv   Headliners  GB News  January 10, 2024 5:00am-6:01am GMT

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gb news. >> good evening. you're with gb news. it's 11:00. the top story government ministers will stop eu judges blocking migrant flights to rwanda by tabling new amendments . 30 rebel amendments. 30 rebel conservative mps say the government can then ignore last minute pyjama injunctions by strasbourg judges trying to ground deportation flights bound for rwanda parliament is due to debate the rwanda bill next week, and tory mps say the new
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measures are backed by the former immigration minister, robert jenrick. full coverage of that right here gb news tomorrow . now the leader of the liberal democrats, ed davey, has told gb news today he won't be handing back his knighthood over the post office scandal, back his knighthood over the post office scandal , despite post office scandal, despite being the minister in charge at the time. it follows the former post office boss, paula vennells, handing back her cbe with immediate effect. there had been widespread calls for her to do so after the horizon. it scandal. more than 700 post office staff were convicted, jailed, bankrupted , some even jailed, bankrupted, some even taking their own lives after faulty software meant they were wrongly accused of theft . wrongly accused of theft. meanwhile, fujitsu, the parent company of horizon, has been called in to answer mps questions next week over its role in the scandal. questions next week over its role in the scandal . the questions next week over its role in the scandal. the prime minister says fujitsu will be held accountable legally or financially if it's found to have made mistakes with parliamentary sources suggesting the prime minister will address
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the prime minister will address the matter in prime minister's questions tomorrow . two us questions tomorrow. two us airlines have found loose bolts on aircraft doors during plane inspections . it's after inspections. it's after a section of the fuselage fell from an alaska airlines boeing 737 max nine on friday. the plane had to make an emergency landing. no passengers were injured and the door was found injured and the door was found in a residential back garden. alaska airlines and united both say they found loose hardware on several boeing max nines. police in ecuador say 13 arrests have been made after a television station was stormed by gunmen earlier on this evening, station was stormed by gunmen earlier on this evening , the earlier on this evening, the country's president declared a state of emergency following the escape of one of the country's most notorious drug gang bosses from tv , from prison, rather, from tv, from prison, rather, but live tv pictures showed masked gunmen waving guns in the southern port city of guayaquil , southern port city of guayaquil, which was thrown into chaos as students fled the local university and shops rolled down
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shutters . president daniel noboa shutters. president daniel noboa signed an executive order immediately afterwards, declaring that internal armed conflict , declaring that internal armed conflict, and listed declaring that internal armed conflict , and listed several conflict, and listed several organisations crime groups as terrorist organisations . now the terrorist organisations. now the coroner has ruled that sinead o'connor, the musician and singer, died of natural causes last year. in july , the dublin last year. in july, the dublin born singer was found unresponsive at her south london home and pronounced dead. she was 56. a statement from southwark coroner's court said they therefore ceased their involvement in her death . now involvement in her death. now you better wrap up warm tonight. the met office says it's going to be very cold across the uk , to be very cold across the uk, and an arctic blast will strike the country again next week. two tonight temperatures are expected to drop close to or below freezing. the health security agency issuing an amber cold health alert, triggering health responses for vulnerable people in parts of southern
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england. it follows storm henk, which left large areas of ground flooded with livestock trapped and thousands of properties damaged . 110 flood alerts are damaged. 110 flood alerts are still in force across the uk thatis still in force across the uk that is the news on gb news. across the uk on tv, in your car, on digital radio and on your smart speaker by saying play your smart speaker by saying play gb news this is britain's news channel . news channel. >> hello and welcome to headliners i'm stephen allen, taking you through tomorrow's top stories for the next hour with the thinking man's louis schaefer. that's josh howie and louis schaefer are . louis schaefer are. >> how are you.7 you louis schaefer are. >> how are you? you could say that i'm the feeling caring, loving man's josh. >> but notice i didn't. >> but notice i didn't. >> howie. >> howie. >> no, that was too much. >> no, that was too much. >> i just like being compared to you because of just those.
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>> those rabid fans have >> those rabid fans you have all, day long. all, like, all day long. >> i have to just deal with louis fans. look at this tie. >> i have to just deal with loulook|s. look at this tie. >> i have to just deal with loulook at look at this tie. >> i have to just deal with loulook at this at this tie. >> i have to just deal with loulook at this tie. this tie. >> i have to just deal with loulook at this tie. jill tie. >> i have to just deal with loulook at this tie. jill and >> look at this tie. jill and libby a me a tie, libby gave me a sent me a tie, andifs libby gave me a sent me a tie, and it's meat. i don't know whether that, but whether you can notice that, but i can smell it. >> it's made out of real meat as well. >> isn't that terrible gift >> isn't that a terrible gift for if you get for you? because if you get hungry, you'll at your hungry, you'll just look at your timer. i can have a bit of timer. oh i can have a bit of this. that's they want. timer. oh i can have a bit of this. want; they want. timer. oh i can have a bit of this. want to they want. timer. oh i can have a bit of this. want to get they want. timer. oh i can have a bit of this. want to get fat. want. timer. oh i can have a bit of this. want to get fat. maybe they want to get fat. maybe they're louis. they want to get fat. maybe themaybe louis. they want to get fat. maybe themaybe they louis. they want to get fat. maybe themaybe they think louis. they want to get fat. maybe themaybe they think of louis. they want to get fat. maybe themaybe they think of meis. or maybe they think of me as meat. meat. there meat. yeah, just man meat. there we slightly we go. that's slightly different, um, let's different, but, um, let's crack on explain that, on before we fully explain that, let's look wednesday's let's take a look at wednesday's front the times goes with front pages. the times goes with post office chief to give up her cbe over scandal. the telegraph says architect of postal scandal demands immunity. express goes with rebels fire warning shot at pm over rwanda bill. the daily mail now give back your millions . the mirror front page simply the word shameful . and finally, the word shameful. and finally, the word shameful. and finally, the daily star men. you can wear your grundys for more than a day
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. those are your front pages . . those are your front pages. first up, what's going on with the times? josh? >> post office chief to give up her cbe over scandal, even though actually , uh, the king though actually, uh, the king has to say, yeah , you're no has to say, yeah, you're no longer got your cbe, but still all she thinks she's in charge. >> she thinks. yeah, exactly. uh, . this there's been a 1.2 uh, so. this there's been a 1.2 million people signed this petition for her to do it. she's doneit petition for her to do it. she's done it pretty much immediate plea. wonder if that's plea. and i wonder if that's just been, like, clever advice, like to get her out of the target in a way, like, like it's sort of getting ahead of it somehow. like don't fight it. just like, yeah, okay, i'm getting i'll give it back . and getting i'll give it back. and please don't focus on me, because now are saying, because now people are saying, we want your wages because we also want your wages because you paid a couple million we also want your wages because you whatnot.a couple million we also want your wages because you whatnot. yeah.)le million we also want your wages because you whatnot. yeah.)le sheillion we also want your wages because you whatnot. yeah.)le she was| and whatnot. yeah. uh, she was in charge, it seems, for about half of this during the more of the prosecution's side of things . she wasn't there when this was all implemented. and the
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beginning of the prosecutions when they were found out. so it's not so solely down to her by any means . it's not so solely down to her by any means. she's it seems like, obviously, she headed like, obviously, that she headed the organisation this stuff like, obviously, that she headed the goingsation this stuff like, obviously, that she headed the going on.)n this stuff like, obviously, that she headed the going on. i'm this stuff like, obviously, that she headed the going on. i'm glad his stuff like, obviously, that she headed the going on. i'm glad the stuff was going on. i'm glad the stuff has come to the fore, that it's captured public's captured the public's imagination. obviously with imagination. uh, obviously with the itv drama, i think it's a little bit sad that it took an itv drama because it was obvious the injustice now has been apparent now for quite a few years, and now we've sort of reached that pitch. that reached that fever pitch. that means actually means that things are actually getting what it was getting done. what if it was a bad drama? this is the terrifying alternate universe . terrifying alternate universe. if it wasn't good if it was if it wasn't a good if it was a half badly acted well. so if half badly acted as well. so if they got toby jones, if they hadn't got toby jones, if it was louis was like, it was louis and he was like, oh, for the post office. oh, i work for the post office. and they've really, uh, they're really messing with me. and i haven't had the figures don't add then, you know, it's a add up. then, you know, it's a nightmare. well , he went nightmare. yeah, well, he went to for it. we'd all be like to jail for it. we'd all be like that. that more than to jail for it. we'd all be like ticomputer more than to jail for it. we'd all be like ticomputer iwrong. than a computer being wrong. >> shocking is , >> well, the shocking thing is, is that this is not one little guy, one little thing fell guy, one little thing that fell through. there hundreds through. there was hundreds of people. was people. people. and this was going since 1990s.
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going on since the 1990s. i mean, granted that and i've i've spent a lot of time in post office in this country and the lines are so long. so you know, somebody sub—post office deserves to be punished. not for this , but for, like, getting al this, but for, like, getting al capone for tax evasion . capone for tax evasion. >> is that what you're thinking? they're in prison. at least for something. >> well, i hope that came across as funnier than it sounded. >> do you remember the episode of seinfeld where kramer tries to system? to opt out of the mail system? and that the mail and it turns out that the mail organisation, a shadowy organisation, they're a shadowy figure do like their own figure that do like their own investigations, figure that do like their own investigé office figure that do like their own investigéoffice actually like the post office is actually like that. they don't call the police. they are the police. yeah, the prosecutions . yeah, they do. the prosecutions. yeah, they do. the prosecutions. yeah, yeah. yeah, they do. the prosecutions. yeaandeah. yeah, they do. the prosecutions. yeaand similar thing >> and similar thing will happened the terms happened in america to the terms going postal had to do with the fact that the american postal system was so dogmatic. there was like a it was like run by military people . and so, uh, military people. and so, uh, there's something what is going i thought going postal meant like going mental. it means it means the people who worked at the office under such the post office were under such tremendous pressure by the authorities . similar to this, authorities. similar to this, they cracked that they cracked,
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and they started shoot people and they started to shoot people up. but these are sub post office, people don't office, so these people don't have employees office, so these people don't have that employees office, so these people don't have that they employees office, so these people don't have that they work>yees office, so these people don't have that they work with. office, so these people don't havwell,|at they work with. office, so these people don't havwell, now, ey work with. office, so these people don't havwell, now, you�*ork with. office, so these people don't havwell, now, you brought. office, so these people don't havwell, now, you brought guns >> well, now, you brought guns into it. we'll move what into it. we'll move on. what about telegraph, what into it. we'll move on. what abothey telegraph, what into it. we'll move on. what abothey saying?aph, what into it. we'll move on. what abowell,saying?aph, what into it. we'll move on. what abowell,sayiltelegraph, what into it. we'll move on. what abowell,sayiltelegraph, so 1at >> well, the telegraph, uh, so this is another story. we're architect postal scandal architect of postal scandal demands there's demands immunity. this. there's a guy there is a, uh. his a guy there who is a, uh. his name is gareth. he was the. it quy- name is gareth. he was the. it guy. he was the it guy. name is gareth. he was the. it guy. he was the it guy . and this guy. he was the it guy. and this is 69 years old, so his life is almost over. it's similar to mine . he worked for fujitsu. it mine. he worked for fujitsu. it system , but he's not trying to system, but he's not trying to have baby. well the people have a baby. well the people don't to know what my story don't need to know what my story is.josh don't need to know what my story is. josh it's a little too personal. i mean, this is supposed to be a news program. has he gone through the male menopause? >> is that now? >> is that now? >> possible, help, >> not possible, i need help, i'm to i'm blinking three times to everybody anyway. >> also, on the front page, you could on. i'm in the midst of >> hold on. i'm in the midst of a story here. are we ready to go at a time? and what saying at a time? and what i'm saying is is, is that is what i'm saying is, is that this there. oh, this this thing there. oh, this is this thing there. oh, this is this something about this this is something about this country. is one the i country. this is one of the i love country, but they're love this country, but they're always always trying to always they're always trying to pin things one person. either
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pin things on one person. either they have investigation which they have an investigation which is one person, or blaming is run by one person, or blaming one there were hundreds one person. there were hundreds of people involved in this evil, including frigid who which is? >> well, there has been there have been no legal ramifications for those people involved. there were people it's were obviously people or it's apparent who apparent there are people who knew the system was faulty. yeah. ahead with yeah. still went ahead with prosecutions exactly are prosecutions who exactly are these people ? that's what needs these people? that's what needs to be found out. >> who knew it a faulty >> who knew that it was a faulty system and then prosecute it anyway. it could be keir anyway. and it could be keir starmer. people to jail starmer. and people went to jail directly because of the testimony of this individual . testimony of this individual. >> well, it's also, if anyone asks for immunity, you start to think that's interesting. yeah. but we move but anyway, we should move on and about hrt. and just talk about hrt. >> well, link >> hrt. well, the hrt link to increased risk of arthritis. this a story that was done by this is a story that was done by by chinese university using by a chinese university using the biobank, which proved the uk biobank, which has proved to thing where to be an amazing thing where they just keep track of people, which the british people which is what the british people are track are very good at keeping track of and but basically it's of people and but basically it's a paradoxical thing because they say that hrt causes cancer and other areas human hormone,
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arthritis . yeah. originally with cancer. >> cancen >> they said it did, but then it turns out it didn't. >> it didn't. and then they're saying that maybe it might actually be be necessarily actually be be not necessarily beneficial . anyway, what this beneficial. anyway, what this story is and i haven't we haven't had a chance to read it as closely as we can. i read it, but i don't trust it. >> josh can we get those words in order makes in an order that makes sense? okay other factors, okay so hrt and other factors, including having four kids and starting your menstruating earlier than 14 and various other factors are linked to in later life. getting arthritis, which is can be very make life very difficult . arthritis very difficult. arthritis already affects women more than men. you um uh, but but, uh, the question is, i guess, that some women, they haven't worked out the scientific reasons why there's a causal factor or whatever it is, but but at the same time, hrt is for many women, including my wife, an absolute lifesaver and i guess that you have to ask yourself
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whether the benefits outweigh the, uh, the costs. and if the benefit is us not breaking up, then i'm really for all it. so then i'm really for all it. so the benefit to you doesn't. it outweighs the cost of her arthritis. that's very good. you always have to use your hands. it's very good of you. um, and what's express focusing on, what's the express focusing on, josh? why don't. we could just smooth that whole point it smooth over that whole point it out. that's what here smooth over that whole point it out.to that's what here smooth over that whole point it out.to smoothit's what here smooth over that whole point it out.to smoothit's whatwe. here smooth over that whole point it out.to smoothit's whatwe. ifere for. to smooth over. if we. if we kept our cool that, it we kept our cool with that, it would be good. now, now we can have the mirror on our arses again. let's. they edit again. uh, let's. they can edit this. um, to the express. again. uh, let's. they can edit this. yes um, to the express. again. uh, let's. they can edit this. yes rebels! the express. again. uh, let's. they can edit this. yes rebels! fireiexpress. again. uh, let's. they can edit this. yes rebels! fire! warning josh? yes rebels! fire! warning shot at pm over rwanda . bill, shot at pm over rwanda. bill, that's not very funny. if they cut into that, why is he laughing this rebel rwanda? laughing at this rebel rwanda? so um, rob, uh, former immigration minister robert jenrick, he retired because he was like i've been saying for years, this is what you've got to you're not doing it. to do and you're not doing it. and retired. he's and so he's retired. now he's forming of 30 mps, forming a big posse of 30 mps, including our very own jacob rees—mogg . uh, i never thought rees—mogg. uh, i never thought i'd those words at and, um,
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i'd say those words at and, um, and yeah, they're trying to put pressure on and get more to make sure that this rwanda bill finally goes through. now, obviously , he he knows what's obviously, he he knows what's going on. he's revealed certain parts of his information about what working there what life was like working there and individuals within the social service , uh, not social service, uh, with not social service, uh, with not social , uh, the civil social services, uh, the civil service um, blocking him or not, you know, but there's still no proof that that rwanda will be a deterrent. i you know, there's still no proof it's the be all end all of like rwanda goes through. and then suddenly immigration is sorted . that's immigration is sorted. that's that's that's my only issue. maybe it will. i don't know, i'm just saying, louis, is this even about that or is this about. we will make it work in the face of europe, and we will then appeal to core voters if we somehow to our core voters if we somehow beat europe , it doesn't matter beat europe, it doesn't matter whether it stops immigration or not. been we've shown not. we've been we've shown strength. >> w- strength. >> that that's true. >> i would say that that's true. i think going to i don't think this is going to work. nobody is work. nobody thinks this is going if it does going to work. and if it does
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work , it's only going work work, it's only going to work for people . going there. for a few people. going there. aren't numbers super aren't the numbers like super low? how many people they're actually planning on sending there million people, there and a million people, whatever 105? knows how whatever, 105? who knows how many thousands are coming in? i think i think they need to start shooting at boats . shooting at boats. >> okay. we're going through that. can i say more thing? >> okay. we're going through thatusingi say more thing? >> okay. we're going through thatusing time? more thing? >> okay. we're going through thatusing time? europea thing? you using time? europe i believe, is a slight misnomer. the hrc europe the hrc is not europe and i think people are trying to truncate like truncate the two together like this still brexit this is somehow still brexit related or haven't got out of related or we haven't got out of europe. is a treaty that we europe. this is a treaty that we have signed up to or a court system that we have signed up to. part of to. it's not about being part of the union . that is the the european union. that is the thing would the thing that would appeal to the core is the conflation the core is the conflation of the two. there is truth to that. >> yes. it's not question. >> yes. no, it's not a question. well, might well, they they might be separate, things, but separate, separate things, but it's idea is giving, it's one basic idea is giving, giving the british power to some world or european organisation . world or european organisation. yeah. so i might as well be the eu. i think even though he didn't say team world, you can still take a drink at home. >> we go the >> finally we go to the wonderful star lewis the wonderful daily star lewis the daily star man.
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>> wear grundies >> you can wear your grundies for more than a day. i don't even know what grundy is, but even know what a grundy is, but i'm guess. couple i'm gonna guess. a couple of years guess. years ago, i'm going to guess. it's underwear or it's like dirty underwear or something. no, no dirty underwear. underwear. underwear. just just underwear. underwear. you've underwear. underwear that you've worn but experts say worn for a day. but experts say the apply the same does not apply for women, sexism . and we women, which is sexism. and we need something about that, need to do something about that, that we can't allow that to happen. same doesn't apply to women because are dirty . women because women are dirty. >> get a break, joe. josh, just a quick question. how how often i guess more thai sentences. oh yeah. i guess more thai sentences. oh yeah . but you don't to sit next yeah. but you don't to sit next to him. he wears them. we didn't actually check that try. >> a joke. are >> that was a joke. women are beautiful fantastic. oh, no. >> that was a joke. women are beasmell fantastic. oh, no. >> that was a joke. women are beasmell righttastic. oh, no. >> that was a joke. women are beasmell right .istic. oh, no. >> that was a joke. women are beasmell right. coming, no. >> that was a joke. women are beasmell right. coming up». >> that was a joke. women are beasmell right. coming up in >> smell it right. coming up in the section, we cover the the next section, we cover the leadership of france and how to solve the problem of prince andrew. him, andrew. thankfully for him, it's not story,
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>> you're listening to gb news, who's . radio? who's. radio? >> welcome back to headlines . >> welcome back to headlines. i'm still stephen allen, and i
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know the full details of how often josh howie and louis schaefer changed their underpass . i'm not wearing underpants. are terrifying. two minutes of my life. um, the metro louis, and it looks like a lawyer is rubbing prince andrew up the wrong way. >> speaking of >> yes, well, speaking of underwear , um, alan dershowitz. underwear, um, alan dershowitz. well, speaking of underwear , well, speaking of underwear, what is his association with underwear? well, because he's had to take it off and have sex with these girls. possibly we don't know this is true. he don't know if this is true. he could have left it on. he could have it or, me, have left it on or, like me, just been just wear it. could have been crotchless. the crotchless. just wear the crotchless. just wear the crotthey're meant be designed >> they're meant to be designed crotchless not wear tear. crotchless not wear and tear. >> sorry, put them on >> i'm sorry, ijust put them on backwards. . backwards. anyway. prince. what's so funny about that? could you . just i'm trying to could you. just i'm trying to imagine what underwear. >> what you think is normal underwear. >> just to make . just make >> just to make. just to make me feel sexy. what's your feel a bit sexy. what's your normal it's got big normal underwear? it's got a big hole you even what hole. you don't even know what i was you stop? you was saying. would you stop? you know what? this is like a new technique you to technique that you have is to listen lewis schaffer. listen to lewis schaffer. just. just ignore what i'm saying. i
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apologise this carry on. this is prince andrew. remember that prince andrew. remember that prince terrible, quote prince made a terrible, quote unquote terrible mistake settling sex case. settling sex abuse case. according x epstein lawyer. according to x epstein lawyer. and this is this alan dershowitz who used to be an amazing lawyer in america, totally full of respect of the people and now completely immersed . related. completely immersed. related. but he was also accused by this virginia roberts or whatever her name was , of doing bad things. name was, of doing bad things. and he fronted it. and he said to the he said to prince andrew, he should have fronted it. he shouldn't have given her any money. he should have said , you money. he should have said, you know, screw you. but he said, he said, said, um, said, he said, uh, he said, um, he said it was the queen. the queen that probably forced him to do it . possibly. you're to do it. possibly. you're embarrassing the firm, as they also said, because there's reason he says probably the reason he says probably the reason why people tend to pay the stuff off, even they the stuff off, even if they haven't is because they haven't done it, is because they don't want other stuff coming out. >> and that's partly issue. >> and that's partly the issue. like, court like, and also, if he's in court , he could sweat . out, you know,
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, he could sweat. out, you know, i would swear i'm sweating here. so he's going to be thinking about your knickers. here's the point. >> why is this big news? this is big because way the big news because the way the royal family works in this country have a bad cop, country is they have a bad cop, a cop, bad a good a good cop, a bad guy, a good 9”!!- a good cop, a bad guy, a good guy. king is a guy. his guy. the king is a good guy. his brother is a bad prince brother is a bad guy. prince charles, prince . uh, prince charles, prince. uh, prince william a good guy. prince william is a good guy. prince harry is a bad guy. so they say, listen , the royal family is listen, the royal family is great. it'sjust listen, the royal family is great. it's just a few of these bad eggs. keep going with us. even even though they're even though even though they're totally on the tide side of. >> an archetypal >> that's an archetypal narrative, it? also like narrative, isn't it? also like shakespeare, stuff. shakespeare, all of that stuff. there's all lion you had there's all lion king. you had there's all lion king. you had the king, the bad brother. the good king, the bad brother. okay, just saying this could okay, i'm just saying this could be what this is. be that's what this is. >> key, people. it's >> it's the key, people. it's the people interested in the the key people interested in the minutiae of this family tree. when the truth is, i don't want to say bad things about these people. i'm not a i'm not a citizen of this country. but i think and i've said it before and i'll say it every single time this program that time i'm on this program that the is worst the royal family is the worst thing is one of the worst things
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about what going to say. about what you're going to say. >> thing. say that. >> your bbc thing. you say that. yeah. you say so much >> the bbc, you say so much every the bbc is worse every episode. the bbc is worse than the there some than having the there are some maybe they just you from than having the there are some majpreviousjust you from than having the there are some majprevious night you from than having the there are some majprevious night. you from the previous night. >> make sense? >> can i just make sense? vegetables family? vegetables or the royal family? which do which one do you. >> think the royal family is >> i think the royal family is better vegetables, but okay. >> royal family is better than vegetables . vegetables. >> wow. is better. meat of >> wow. meat is better. meat of course okay any course is great. okay josh, any actual take on this story before we i think vegetables we move on, i think vegetables are the royal family are better than the royal family >> okay, interesting. of course. uh, some potatoes also are called ones . so they are called king ones. so they are the telegraph . josh, david the telegraph. josh, david cameron risks upsetting the jewish community and not because of the thing with that of the thing he did with that pig- of the thing he did with that pig. yeah >> oh, boo . >> oh, boo. >> oh, boo. >> cameron says israel may have broken international law. this is when he was being questioned. uh, now , to my mind, david uh, now, to my mind, david cameron the prime cameron was the worst prime minister we've ever had. uh, i, i can't stand him. uh, why why competition, though? because uh, because i think he started this whole brexit thing. and whether you are for or against brexit or
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whatever , i believe it cost our whatever, i believe it cost our country 6 or 7 years a huge amount of toxicity. the government didn't do anything else. why we're else. and that's why we're behind many other issues behind on so many other issues and down and schools falling down and whatnot. okay, i can't whatnot. anyway okay, i can't believe he's let into believe he's been let back into into anywhere power . into any anywhere near power. and i'd say that even if he wasn't saying this about israel , wasn't saying this about israel, but, um, he was. yeah, he was being questioned and someone asked, he said, ah, am i worried that israel is taking action that israel is taking action that may be in breach in international law ? uh, yes, of international law? uh, yes, of course. so they've taken that to be they they may have broken whatever. didn't say that. whatever. so he didn't say that. he be a good guy. there's no he may be a good guy. there's no proof that, you know. uh, so proof of that, you know. uh, so lewis may i'm waiting. proof of that, you know. uh, so lewis may i'm waiting . okay. i'm lewis may i'm waiting. okay. i'm just trying to think here. where normal underwear underneath after all of that off that story. the point is that there's no, um , proof that he's saying no, um, proof that he's saying that i haven't seen any evidence of them breaching it. so then make telegraph making make so the telegraph making this story and a headline this into a story and a headline is like, it's very misleading. it's like, well, okay, look, if
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he says , oh, i saw this stuff. he says, oh, i saw this stuff. and the fact is that, that there are targets like moss and um, and schools and hospitals and it has been proven now that hamas operates out of all of those areas illegally , by the way, areas illegally, by the way, breaking, uh , breaking the, the, breaking, uh, breaking the, the, the law themselves, you know, so committing war crimes. so i think that cameron, i think is a just, just a, not a, not a great 9”!!- just, just a, not a, not a great guy. that's all i'm going to say . that's i get too emotional thinking about it. >> i disagree okay. >> i disagree okay. >> i disagree . you >> let's go i disagree. you know, i was going to say do you think he's a good guy? >> if he's a good >> i don't know if he's a good guy or a guy. he's saying guy or a bad guy. he's saying what be said, which what has to be said, which he has placate a certain has to placate a certain audience to say, hey, israel should be this. should maybe not be doing this. that believes that doesn't mean he believes it. saying it. why it. he's just saying it. why does to placate does he have to placate them? >> he wait >> why can't he go? wait a minute, haven't minute, because they haven't done proof done this or there's no proof that they've anything. that they've done anything. >> people in >> there's lots of people in this really think this country who really think that is that what israel is doing is a bad i don't you bad thing. and i don't think you have them. have to placate them. >> yeah, i think you have to say no, compass
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no, get your moral, uh, compass in order here. yeah, there are still over 100 missing hostages , still over 100 missing hostages, some of them young women who we know have been sexually abused. and to be brought and they need to be brought home. taken, you know, so it's terrible what's happened. no one likes innocent deaths. it's a war. but would be over in war. but it would be over in a second if the hostages were returned. >> it would not be. it would not be over in a second. if the hostages returned. is hostages returned. israel is trying . and i. i'm not going to trying. and i. i'm not going to israel. israel is making a statement. they're making a statement. they're making a statement. if hezbollah in the north, to everybody in the north, to everybody in the north, you keep doing what you're doing. and here is gaza , you're doing. and here is gaza, the statement is that a good statement? >> the telegraph lewis and the snp is coming up with more laws to get westminster to veto them. >> yeah. this is this is bad >> yeah. this is this is the bad news refused news stuff. parents who refused children, gender change face seven years in jail by scotland and this is a similar to the thing that was happening before where the british where where the british government who still control government who still has control over most of the right in over most of the stuff right in scotland, said to the other laws
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that nicola sturgeon wanted to come in, you can't, you can't do that. what they're saying here is saying if you tell is they're saying if you tell your kid , possibly they don't your kid, possibly they don't know how far this is going to 90, know how far this is going to go, but it sounds like if you tell kid, take off that tell your kid, take off that dress, don't the dress, don't use the pink scooter. even your father scooter. even though your father bought um, are you bought it for you. um, are you talking about your own son's hair? anyway this is a tough time . anyway, um, there . then time. anyway, um, there. then you will. then you could be sent to the cornfield as they say here. >> josh . so it's amazing that >> josh. so it's amazing that the snp is still sort of pursuing these kind of laws when they were so, so quickly found undone. when they tried to pass through the or they did pass through, by the way . but except through, by the way. but except it was then the uk . now there is it was then the uk. now there is anidea it was then the uk. now there is an idea that this is a further strategy when you put a male rapist into a female jail, any normal human being says this is morally wrong . and so even snp morally wrong. and so even snp supporters were like, no, this is too far. the question is
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whether this one is going to pass. it's harder for people to take a moral position on it. now what they've done is also they've conflated , um , they've conflated, um, conversion therapy. again. um for homosexuals with conversion therapy or the idea of conversion therapy with, um , conversion therapy with, um, this trans ideology, they're not the same. so to put them in the same bill is a bad idea. number one, no one wants, um, these sort of gay, uh, conversion stuff or whatever apart from lewis, but it, um, the danger is how what they've discussed here as psychology , basically as psychology, basically psychological harm . what is psychological harm. what is psychological harm. what is psychological harm. what is psychological harm to a child? is it saying to them , you can't is it saying to them, you can't wear this dress? well, if they then go and have a big old fit about it and whatever, is that psychological because psychological harm? because they're they're, they're because they're, they're crying about it. if they're saying that parents held saying that parents can be held up years in jail, i up to seven years in jail, i mean, ridiculous. so mean, this is ridiculous. so it's but sorry, going back to the original point was, is it trying to force the uk's hand
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where the uk then steps in and goes , ah, well, we're going to goes, ah, well, we're going to stop this bill, which is what they did last time, except now they did last time, except now the people not the scottish people are not going get behind or be as going to get behind or be as against were against it as they were with the. theory. okay did the. that's my theory. okay did that make any sense? i'm sorry. yeah, i think we'll play the clip again in a months clip again in a few months as the carries and see clip again in a few months as thyou're carries and see clip again in a few months as thyou're right.:arries and see clip again in a few months as thyou're right. okay. and see clip again in a few months as thyou're right. okay well,nd see if you're right. okay well, let's move on the times. josh let's move on to the times. josh and putting and finally, they're putting the gay indeed. yes gay in gay paree. indeed. yes uh, attal appointed as uh, gabriel attal appointed as the first openly gay french pm. so obviously france has a different, um , uh, system. uh different, um, uh, system. uh power system, governmental system, whatever they've got their president macron, he's really in charge, like, but they do have a prime minister and the prime minister essentially runs the government for macron and just does what he says and tries to law. now, the to get the law. now, the one the pm uh , hasn't pm they've had in, uh, hasn't really very popular. really it's not very popular. macron's not very popular ehhen macron's not very popular either. but this guy, he's been running the educational system, he's, old and he's, uh, he's 34 years old and they've put him in there they've sort of put him in there hoping he's done good hoping because he's done a good job education that he's job with education in that he's
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going and get going to turn around and get some government stuff some of this government stuff put to, put through that. they need to, um, and, and, uh, and he's also gay - um, and, and, uh, and he's also gay . uh, and um, and, and, uh, and he's also gay. uh, and louis so he was in charge of education, which is the biggest sector of government in france, apparently. but that's all their that's because of all their irregular verbs, i imagine. um so see this so how do you see this as panning so how do you see this as par um, would so how do you see this as parum, would like to see. i >> um, i would like to see. i tell you something. i was thinking about this before. i know more about more things than thinking about this before. i know people. )out more things than thinking about this before. i know people. i'm more things than thinking about this before. i know people. i'm not �*e things than thinking about this before. i know people. i'm not alwayss than most people. i'm not always right. but i do know more about the right things, more about french, do french, the way the french do stuff, know, remember stuff, i don't know, i remember when was kid, remember when i was a kid, and i remember there was just giscard d'estaing. i remember this guy probably time. probably even before your time. and america thought he was and we in america thought he was the the world. the greatest guy in the world. and came to visit this and then i came to visit this country, visit europe . country, visit europe. >> he, one of the, um, >> was he, uh, one of the, um, he was he was like a macron guy. >> no, he was he was like. he was he was very liberal. was he was he was very liberal. digitatum i don't know, somebody out there knows what i'm talking about. >> that's something that >> yeah, that's something that needs . needs to be cooked. >> i'm making a point. my point is this i personally think that
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macron, because he's centrist and this country , he is turning and this country, he is turning france like all countries. now you got to pick which side you're on. there's a war going on and there's no place to be centrist in, in a country that's at war and france is at war. like we are at war. >> we're not at war. and i think people moving more to people are moving more to the centre. view. centre. that's my view. uh, perfect look that. perfect balance. look at that. you're welcome. ofcom. yeah. part but coming part two dealt with. but coming up about migrants, up we're talking about migrants, sexism and diversity. that's just a standard tease that we can put at the end of any section.
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seeing in a variety of sectors, i think they're deeply exclusionary . exclusionary. >> welcome back to headliners to the daily mail. louis and joey barton's been saying some misogynist things. are you going to sue him for breach of copyright? >> yeah. well, uh, to show they're not. not everybody. anyway. joey barton faces government his his government action over his his dangerous and disgusting comments as uk sport minister vows to crack down on former
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footballers vile, sexist rants by holding social media companies accountable. and this is joey barton , who who is joey barton, who who basically said he didn't like the idea that women were , uh, the idea that women were, uh, not that women, but that non—professional footballers were sportscasters on a on a high level. >> is that all he said? >> is that all he said? >> he said other things. he equated something, but he didn't equate. he compared somebody. the point is, the big issue here is what is the government getting involved in. this is they're not is it not? the first amendment in this country is there not freedom of speech amendments ? isn't there? isn't amendments? isn't there? isn't there the right to say no barons, barons ? not that. oh barons, barons? not that. oh yeah.i barons, barons? not that. oh yeah. i guess there isn't the first amendment. but the point is , is that stuart andrew, the is, is that stuart andrew, the sports minister, he wants put sports minister, he wants to put on the social media, quote unquote, put pressure on it, put pressure them . so what pressure on them. so what business he does he have business does he does he have the right to do that? i'm asking question number one. and should he the right it, has he have the right to do it, has the send a letter to the right to send a letter to somebody exactly. somebody and say, exactly. >> sport
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>> so i'm the minister for sport and i don't think this is really good. what's so ridiculous about this said, these this is he said, these are dangerous comments that open the front. they are dangerous comments he made. now, i believe he a joke this campaign he made a joke this campaign compared to female commentators, commentators , commentary, commentators, commentary, commentators, commentary, commentators to fred weston and the west or whatever, you know , the west or whatever, you know, and i believe the gist of it was that they murdered the commentary he so badly or murdered the game. that's i think, what he's trying to get at. he's obviously not a professional comedian . professional comedian. >> it's not bad, though. >> it's not bad, though. >> bad. it's not bad. >> it's not bad. it's not bad. so trying oh my so people trying to say, oh my god, compared god, he compared them to murderers and murderers bad. >> i know someone who was murdered. >> it's horrible . it's >> it's really horrible. it's like, come man, address . like, come on man, address. mostly making joke. mostly making a joke. >> address my issue. >> i address my issue. >> i address my issue. >> right, well, i will >> all right, well, i will address issue made address your issue after i made this so the. but this is this point. so the. but this is the thing about him , right? the thing about him, right? i don't know who he is. i've understand. know understand. i don't know anything about football. read anything about football. i read some tweets . it's a wider some of his tweets. it's a wider issue here. he's talking about people promoted for merit .
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people being promoted for merit. ocracy. railing against ocracy. he's railing against what i can't stand being called, but woke culture or whatever that has begun. speaking that has begun. he's speaking out it and agreeing out about it and i'm agreeing with it . and then said that with it. and then he said that israel is committing a genocide. and fun , no stop. and i went no fun, no stop. >> should the government. >> should the government. >> also, he said he wouldn't come on gb and he was come on gb news. and he was really of not very really like sort of not very nice he like, stop nice about it. he was like, stop gb contacting me. and gb news, stop contacting me. and you're not i'm about. it's you're not what i'm about. it's like, look , we're about like, look, we're about people having and being able having opinions and being able to talk freely. so we're exactly what you're about. i don't know to talk freely. so we're exactly what you re about. i don't know to talk freely. so we're exactly what you thinkyut. i don't know to talk freely. so we're exactly what you think we're don't know to talk freely. so we're exactly what you think we're about,1ow to talk freely. so we're exactly what you think we're about, but stop projecting , joey. stop stop projecting, joey. stop projecting. you to answer projecting. i want you to answer my yeah? you my question, john. yeah? you might think we're the. yeah, well, , answer my question. well, josh, answer my question. >> what is question? the >> what is the question? the question should not question is the state should not be the state question. >> a statement. >> that's a statement. >> that's a statement. >> say do you agree >> well, you say do you agree with ? so just said with it? so what i just said we're cracking on to the telegraph next. >> josh in channel 4 is accused of having a lack of diversity. you wait till channel 4 hears about this. oh oh, yeah. channel 4 diversity row ramps up after ethnic minority women blocked
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from, uh, board . now this is a from, uh, board. now this is a reasonable man. she's a former bbc executive . and essentially bbc executive. and essentially they sort of after going through they sort of after going through the interview process, she was the interview process, she was the one who was recommended. and the one who was recommended. and the culture secretary, lisa fraser, said, and, um, and the question is, did she have reasons ? i'm, i'm going to be reasons? i'm, i'm going to be optimistic and say, yeah, she had some reasons why maybe this person was not right to lead that organisation. this comes on the back of a day ago where there was a bit of a hoo ha, because four people were promoted board were promoted to the board who were white. out , white. but as it turns out, there were actually people there were actually five people who were promoted the board who were promoted to the board and was a person and one of them was a person of colour and seems to pretty colour and that seems to pretty much the sort of much fix with the sort of demographics of the uk. and by the way, two of the 4 or 3 of the way, two of the 4 or 3 of the four were women as well. so that suggests another level of diversity . city. these are diversity. city. these are leaders of their field leaders of companies and whatever. um, and seem able to do this job uh, head of boots and you know big
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people clever. >> why do we care answer that. >> why do we care answer that. >> well, because they're trying. >> well, because they're trying. >> because i think channel 4 specific hinckley is all about like, we're going to have 20% diversity. we're going to have eight, 6% lgbt, and we're having this amount of disabled people or whatever. but on their board now 14 of the 15. now it's 14 of the 15. >> so why do you care? why should we care ? because i know should we care? because i know why someone put the no why someone put the story. no because because it's state because because it's a state media, the state propaganda network, the channel four is owned in part or in full by, by, by the people. and that's. and what's my call it, money. the where does where does the money come from? >> it comes from advertising and they're given and they're given that air, that air. so it's not it's in a trust and it's that we don't anything it. don't pay anything towards it. >> to keep on >> whatever i'm going to keep on this track, please. >> it's true that you know more about most things than most people, just not this. >> well, no, they have >> not this. well, no, they have a board directors. why do a board of directors. why do people what board people care about what the board of it's of directors is? if it's a people , it private company people, is it a private company or not? i'm going to check this out. when i come back, is it
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out. and when i come back, is it people who are watching on twitter, louis schaefer at twitter, louis schaefer at twitter a public twitter could be a public company and take any of our company and not take any of our money. it a do we care who's money. is it a do we care who's on the board sainsbury's or on the board of sainsbury's or who's of people who's on the board of people that make it a big who are about have the have you where have you been the last five years? >> we need >> every story is about we need representation and whatnot. the entire film, barbie focussed on the boardroom of mattel . anyway, the boardroom of mattel. anyway, um, telegraph . lewis, um, to the telegraph. lewis, a migrant, avoided deportation because he claimed he couldn't remember to how speak his mother tongue, speaking foreign tongue, not speaking a foreign language. is language. maybe this guy is british very good. >> yeah, well, very good. i speak , i speak english, uh , speak, i speak english, uh, margaret, cannabis farmer, allowed to such disdain. i know, because i'm trying to think. do ispeak because i'm trying to think. do i speak english? i don't know, i think that as well. i, i use those words. i use your english words , your few english words words, your few english words that you've maintained, not the “wv that you've maintained, not the nappy you call it. nappy or whatever you call it. margaret, farmer. margaret, cannabis farmer. cannabis. that's another english word. calls a cannabis in word. nobody calls a cannabis in america. it ? i america. what do you call it? i don't know, green. they call it green here. uh, my dealer calls it green . it green. >> are you all right? do you
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need to. john water? i don't know. >> you know what? josh gets on my nerves. he gets. there's something him that's just something about him that's just slightly with slightly wrong. i agree with most things say, but most of the things you say, but there's always something slightly , slightly wrong . slightly, slightly wrong. because you're a jew. you're a jew . that's why i knew it. jew. that's why i knew it. anyway uh, margaret, cannabis farmer allowed to stay in uk after claiming you forgot to how speak his native language. he's a an albanian from a guy. he's an albanian from serbia who came to this country and he was 13. he snuck in at 20. they said, can i stay here for good? they said, you can stay here for good. and how did he the country? he pay back the country? by growing weed. now, number one, i'm against making i'm against all laws preventing people from doing stuff like this . not doing stuff like this. not because i support drugs , but i'm because i support drugs, but i'm against the idea of a police state. but they said but he he went he we need way less police than we need he he basically said i forgotten how to speak, sir behan he could still speak albanian. and there was a difference between albanian and serbian. if you know the
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difference, contact us. i don't was albanian and one's serbian? no it's just there might be a very slight difference. i think albanian is a very slight difference. >> there's more of a glottal stop. >> yeah. >> yeah. >> can of bees can't cannabis. >> can of bees can't cannabis. >> um, so basically he said he forgot how to speak. sir behan. so they let him stay in the country. all right. >> the story is about that. but what it's really about is, of course, a broken, uh, system where someone who has committed crimes in this country, who was allowed in, he was 13. he obviously knows how to speak serbian and albanian and whatever. he lives his whatever. he lives with his brother they live brother serbian, they live together. never together. what? they never mention any words serbian or mention any words in serbian or whatever . and if they're in whatever. and even if they're in serbian , albanian is an official serbian, albanian is an official language. is like some language. so this is like some little it's like it's little law. it's like it's affecting his human rights. no no. sorry, mate. you committed some crimes. he came home when he was 13. his asylum, by the way, there was his asylum claim was still was actually refused, yet still they let him stay. yet it's like. and then they were like, all right, finally you can you can just stay.
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>> question that i have, >> but the question that i have, and that people to and i think that people need to know this, it's a very you you're in a country. been you're in a country. i've been here years. grow fond here for 23 years. you grow fond of you know grow of it. the people you know grow fond of or maybe you grow fond of you, or maybe you grow fond of you, or maybe you grow fond them. and it's a fond of them. and it's a tremendous penalty to kick somebody they've been somebody out after they've been in for 17 years. in the country for 17 years. well okay. >> so it's a penalty. but you know that's because know what? that's because it's a privilege to be here. yeah and so are to be here so if you are going to be here you know what do good stuff . you know what do good stuff. yeah. stick laws. yeah. yeah. stick to the laws. yeah. obey police. is on obey the police. and this is on the back of news last week when albanian crime boss was allowed to remain in the uk after he smuggled 8 million like the system is broken and i think we need controlled migration and migrants play a part of our economy and all of this stuff . economy and all of this stuff. but we have to have be able to kick out people who commit laws and break the law and whatnot . and break the law and whatnot. and fewer criminals. controversial. yeah. all right. we'll mirror we'll look into that. the mirror now , josh and south korea is now, josh and south korea is banning farming dog meat as we're destroying xl bully dogs. i smell a post—brexit trade deal
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that's what i wrote at the top. i was like, ah, send all the xl bully dogs to the, uh. but then i got abused . i once got i got abused. i once got a really long email from someone who like you when who was literally like you when i talked the excel, but he i talked about the excel, but he was i'm going to get you. was like, i'm going to get you. watch yourself. but it's like , watch yourself. but it's like, then going hear dog then i'm going to hear the dog coming. maybe coming. so yeah, but maybe we should jokes two should do jokes about like two hours instead. are hours instead. yes, there are those are slightly those owners are slightly different. those owners are slightly differen'sale of dog meat as new those owners are slightly diffecouldile of dog meat as new those owners are slightly diffecould jailf dog meat as new those owners are slightly diffecould jail illegalneat as new those owners are slightly diffecould jail illegal butchers. ew law could jail illegal butchers. uh, for years now, over half of south koreans want dog meat to be. don't undermine me . south koreans want dog meat to be. don't undermine me. i'm telling a story here. i've read the story. you're trying to turn your silly light on. i don't know, people already know you've got got. yes. got your fans. you got. yes. well doing really well done. you're doing really well twitter. well on twitter. >> light. >> everyone loves my light. is a bit okay , well, sorry, i didn't >> okay, well, sorry, i didn't think that they were focusing on it, is obviously it, but this is obviously they're focusing. it, but this is obviously the thisocusing. it, but this is obviously the thisoc obviously you draw people. >> have a charisma . i can't >> you have a charisma. i can't compete with you your stupid compete with you in your stupid light. even i wore a grey light. even though i wore a grey tie, i don't know, match my a light blue suit. >> it's like, what kind suit >> it's like, what kind of suit is this? it's like, don't
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is this? it's from like, i don't know, to like know, i'm trying to look like a 19405 know, i'm trying to look like a 1940s gangsters. >> we've a picture of man >> we've got a picture of a man with let's go. with a dog. okay. let's go. let's look , it's let's hit. oh, hey, look, it's always about you. did you have a dog? boy, did you eat it ? yeah. dog? boy, did you eat it? yeah. why that? why? it's this why is that? why? it's in this story. >> w more shocking. >> i think it's more shocking. look the hair. >> i think it's more shocking. looyou the hair. >> i think it's more shocking. looyou the is0'. >> i think it's more shocking. looyou the iso much more >> you look so much more handsome now. oh, right? handsome now. oh, is that right? i so , it suits you very i think so, it suits you very much. yeah. no, that's. so what was this for a photo shoot or something? >> it was for a photo shoot, which i pretended to be more like a man of the people, because actually, that because i actually, at that time, dogs. but you time, did not like dogs. but you look that look a bit special in that photo. mean ? photo. what does that mean? >> you know, you're lovely. yeah. um it. i haven't yeah. um that's it. i haven't covered that at all. we've covered that story at all. we've got to crack on. that's it for part nailed in part three. we've nailed it in the a story the next bit. a story about a woman eats no carbs and woman who eats no carbs and a story about the death of love. looks has been looks like lewis has been pestering again . pestering the producers again. lewis. in a minute
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i don't. these people won't see you. it's . you. it's. >> welcome back to headliners
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the independent. josh and a synagogue in new york was the scene of a remake of the shawshank redemption. you yeah. secret tunnel in nyc synagogue leads to brawl between police and worshippers. now, this is a very famous synagogue. it used to be the home of rabbi menachem mendel schneerson , who, uh, who mendel schneerson, who, uh, who was, uh , leader of this chabad was, uh, leader of this chabad movement, which, uh, and he sort of single handedly revived it after the holocaust and is revered and essentially about ten students or more , but ten ten students or more, but ten have been arrested, have built like a tunnel through the dorms and then under some staff and into this building. now and then under some staff and into this building . now the into this building. now the question is why they did it. and as our former rabbinical student, myself , not as orthodox student, myself, not as orthodox as that, but still pretty orthodox , uh, i would suggest orthodox, uh, i would suggest it's because they wanted to do some studying and stuff , and it some studying and stuff, and it was like it's all about access to these spaces, and all to these spaces, and it's all about proving how religious you are so but what's
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are. so the, uh, but what's unfortunate is that this has kicked off a sort of internal fight between the people who manage the building, the leadership of the chabad movement, want all this movement, who want all this structural sorted out . and structural stuff sorted out. and these younger students who are sort of kicking off. so in the end, they had to call in the police. uh to, to deal with these of riotous students these sort of riotous students who are just too religious. it's good to have a trade , though, good to have a trade, though, isn't it? you can dig a tunnel. it's to good have something to fallwell, that's why that's not >> well, that's why that's not why this story news. because why this story is news. because it jews in no, because it got jews in it. no, because it got jews in it. no, because it but because it has it has jews. but because it has jews. there's tunnel jews. because there's a tunnel and i think people are looking at oh, look, there's at it saying, oh, look, there's at it saying, oh, look, there's a it's similar to a tunnel. and it's similar to the didn't know the tunnel. you didn't know this. similar to the this. and it's similar to the tunnelin this. and it's similar to the tunnel in when do tunnel in gaza when they do things that have nothing do things that have nothing to do with had with it. the jews have had a long history of tunnel making, including the including the brooklyn—battery , the brooklyn—battery tunnel, the queens—midtown tunnel, brooklyn—battery tunnel, the queens—midtown tunnel , the queens—midtown tunnel, the lincoln tunnel, the holland tunnel. they all were built in some way with massive jewish involvement . and so that's what involvement. and so that's what this is . this is it's a very so
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this is. this is it's a very so through their genes. it's a very interesting story, josh, this story because because there's a huge group of jews who have basically opted out of the mainstream jewish thing, the jews that are fighting for israel , there are all these israel, there are all these lubavitcher jews, the very religious jews , not even the religious jews, not even the very religious. it's a sect of jews who say, we're waiting for the messiah to come. we're not participating in this israel. >> well, they're saying that actually a lot more of them are becoming zionists, even though there is that true? have you heard that of what's heard that because of what's happening and whatnot? >> historically they >> okay. but historically they haven't been a tunnel. >> confused as to why this haven't been a tunnel. >> to :onfused as to why this haven't been a tunnel. >> to thisised as to why this haven't been a tunnel. >> to this story; to why this haven't been a tunnel. >> to this story. iso why this haven't been a tunnel. >> to this story. is thaty this haven't been a tunnel. >> to this story. is that why; links to this story. is that why you just in case? you dig a tunnel just in case? >> no, tunnel. >> that's where? no, the tunnel. because they're because these they're they're a bit these. sect is a bit bit these. this sect is a bit excitable to the times now louis. >> and research has found that wives lose their passion sooner than husbands from the research team that also brought up that thing about bears and woods and the toilet habit. >> well, it's also, i'm >> yeah, well, it's also, i'm very familiar with with women
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losing order very quickly. losing their order very quickly. um, it this is women odour. yeah. their order. women lose their loving feeling much faster than husbands. this is a study that was done in the journal of association psychology. and it's like one of those typical things where they ask women, uh, have they lost their love for their husbands and women are much more likely to say they lost . they likely to say they lost. they lost the love for their husbands than husbands are going to say that. it's huge that. like it's a huge difference, it? that. like it's a huge diffwomen it? that. like it's a huge diffwomen mostly women who >> women who mostly women who have in marriages. have affairs in marriages. >> well, it's all changing >> yeah, well, it's all changing . it's all changing. in mind . it's all changing. not in mind what saying this . it's all changing. not in mind what is saying this . it's all changing. not in mind what is they're/ing this . it's all changing. not in mind what is they're blamingiis . it's all changing. not in mind what is they're blaming it on thing is they're blaming it on two things. okay. which is women have do housework , more have to do housework, more housework, and they're grumpy doing that. that's a lie. it's a total lie in this country. and i've i've seen the homes i've lived i've seen the homes of people, english of the english people, english women they're they're so women. they're pigs. they're so messy. but the most important thing is the reason why this is true is because women are never happy. they never are. just look at their husband and say this is the best i can do. i should just grow to love him. they always
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want they're want something better. they're always contacting lewis schaffer over twitter. schaffer over twitter. lewis schaffer things are desperate. >> okay. and then finally, the daily lewis and a woman daily star lewis and a woman onune daily star lewis and a woman online says eating nothing but eggs cured her eggs and butter has cured her eczema, but it may have turned her thrush into a cake . her thrush into a cake. >> well, you know what? that's interesting because thrush actually is by high actually is caused by high carbohydrate. the story carbohydrate. anyway, the story you're wrong and women eats 22 eggs block of block eggs and a block of block of butter day claims it's butter every day and claims it's healed . this. is this a mrs. schaffer? >> this is a future. mrs. schaffer, you know what is? >> this %- is? >> this what's happened is >> this is what's happened is five when i did my >> this is what's happened is five thing, when i did my >> this is what's happened is five thing, mywhen i did my >> this is what's happened is five thing, my low i did my >> this is what's happened is five thing, my low carbd my >> this is what's happened is five thing, my low carb thing, carb thing, my low carb thing, when all meat, i mean all when i went all meat, i mean all meat eating only, uh, is that it's really giving you a mental clarity as well. it basically, i know seems like it hasn't, know it seems like it hasn't, but actually you but it actually does. if you google if you google high carbohydrate and mental carbohydrate diets and mental illness, there's a wealth of information there. we don't know. >> but you know what, lewis? she's got eczema, psoriasis is cystic. had she had she just cystic. she had she had she just sounds sounds your sounds she sounds like your type. that's what i'm saying. >> similar to me. >> well it's similar to me. i had all of those things. had
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had all of those things. i had full psoriasis. sleep full body psoriasis. i had sleep apnoea. mess. i had apnoea. i was a mess. i had i had erectile dysfunction. i couldn't keep it down. uh, things , things were for some things, things were for some people, they're watching this at 559 in the morning. >> this is not nice. >> did i say the wrong thing? the truth is, is this is the truth is, this is a this is just one. this woman was a she was an ex vegan. she was attention seeking when she was a vegan. she didn't post about their diets online or attention seeking . seeking. >> oh my god, that is the biggest hypocrisy that i've seen . beautiful from anybody. get there eventually . there eventually. >> wow. yeah, it is true. i'm attention seeking. it's always just shush , he's more just look at shush, he's more attention, grows a whole beard to attention to himself . to get attention to himself. >> let's another quick look >> let's take another quick look at pages though. >> and that over the >> and is that show over the post office to chief give up her cbe over scandal? post office to chief give up her cbe over scandal ? the telegraph cbe over scandal? the telegraph architect of postal scandal demands immunity. the express goes with rebels fire warning shot at pm over rwanda bill. the daily mail now give back your
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millions. the mirror simply goes with the word shameful and finally, daily star men, you can wear your grundys for more than a day, which is good. yippee! that's tonight's show. that's it for tonight's show. thank you my guest, josh and thank you to my guest, josh and louis. tomorrow at 11 louis. we're back tomorrow at 11 with cressida and bruce with leo and cressida and bruce devlin will be here. and, uh, if you're five, stay you're watching at five, stay tuned breakfast, which is on tuned for breakfast, which is on the way. next, have a good one. >> that warm feeling inside from boxt sponsors of weather boxt boilers sponsors of weather on . gb news evening. on. gb news evening. >> welcome to your latest weather update from the met office for gb news. i'm alex deakin, another cold one tonight and tomorrow . quite a bit more and tomorrow. quite a bit more cloud tomorrow over northeast england and eastern scotland. some sunny skies, definitely in the south. high pressure is still dominating our weather close to the centre of this high. seen some stubborn high. we've seen some stubborn fog the coming fog patches, the breeze coming around high bringing in a around the high bringing in a bit more cloud over northeast england and eastern scotland dunng england and eastern scotland during the night. so maybe 1 or 2 and there as 2 showers here and there as well. be pretty light, well. they'll be pretty light, pretty well scattered and they
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will maybe a little will be of rain, maybe a little bit on the hills further bit of snow on the hills further south. bit of snow on the hills further soutclear and cold. cold and clear and cold. cold temperatures down to minus one minus two, even towns and minus two, even in towns and cities feeling colder with cities and feeling colder with that which will be a that wind, which will be a feature of the weather tomorrow, as be northeast as it will be over northeast england scotland , england and eastern scotland, and here as well. and a cloudy day here as well. so feeling even colder without any sunshine with that breeze again. scotland should again. western scotland should see quite a bit of sunshine. some possible for some sunshine possible for northern ireland and plenty of sunshine across the south. still 1 or scattered showers coming 1 or 2 scattered showers coming in and where it is cloudier with a wind. even though a stronger wind. even though temperatures little higher temperatures are a little higher tomorrow, probably feel tomorrow, it'll probably feel colder. mostly 5 or celsius, colder. mostly 5 or 6 celsius, so still below average for the time of year . another frosty one time of year. another frosty one in the south on wednesday night and but again and thursday morning, but again here fine and sunny here generally fine and sunny for again thursday is for most again thursday is looking dry again. there's quite a of cloud at times in a bit of cloud at times in northeast england and eastern scotland. temperatures at six and feeling cold once and seven, so feeling cold once more, particularly in the east with a brisk, chilly wind, looks like things are heating up.
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challenge as he faces his first prime minister's question of the yeah >> breaking overnight, 30 tory rebel mps are set to back amendments that toughen up rishi sunak's flagship rwanda policy, with politicians claiming the stakes could not be higher . stakes could not be higher. >> the architect of the faulty horizon, it system has reportedly demanded immunity before appearing in front of an inquiry on the post office scandal that saw more than 70 subpostmasters wrongly convicted
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