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tv   Headliners  GB News  January 16, 2024 11:00pm-12:01am GMT

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his plan, they strengthen his plan, they weren't impressed by the remarks. from the prime minister to gb news on monday, making clear he would overrule european judges which try and frustrate the will of the uk government in sending illegally arrived migrants who arrived here by boat back to rwanda. there has been some casualties too. we have seen the resignations of both lee anderson and brendan clarke—smith, two deputy chairmen of the tory party and later tonight, the resignation of jane stevenson, a parliamentary private secretary to kemi badenoch . so food for to kemi badenoch. so food for thought overnight for government whips and for mr sunak and his team as we go into a key day tomorrow when more amendments are voted on. but crucially, if the bill remains unamended , the bill remains unamended, there will be a third reading tomorrow night and that vote could be lost unless whips and the pm maybe himself personally , the pm maybe himself personally, can persuade some of those 60 or so tory mps not to vote the bill down on wednesday night. full
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coverage of that vote tomorrow. >> right here gb news now , also >> right here gb news now, also today in the post office scandal , a fujitsu boss accused the post office of knowing about bugs and errors in the horizon it system. the business and trade committee heard from key figures involved in the post office scandal, including a fujitsu executive called paul patterson . he apologised and patterson. he apologised and admitted his company had a moral obligation, as he put it to contribute towards compensating victims and the wrongly accused former postmaster and leader of the subpostmasters alliance , the subpostmasters alliance, alan bates, blamed red tape for delays to compensation payments . delays to compensation payments. the coldest january night in 14 years is hitting the uk tonight. temperatures in scotland are reaching as low, potentially as 15 degrees. sorry i should rephrase that. minus 15 degrees more than 100 schools were closed as well in scotland today, as the met office issued
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yellow warnings for snow and ice , including northern england and parts of wales. , including northern england and parts of wales . that's going to parts of wales. that's going to remain in place until midnight and overnight. remain in place until midnight and overnight . the met office and overnight. the met office saying a cold plunge of arctic air has moved south across the whole country over the last week, making it 5 or 6 degrees lower than usual for this time of year. the government's confirmed thousands of households in england and wales are now eligible for cold weather payments . it's now the weather payments. it's now the words climate change have been named as the 2023 children's word of the year by oxford university press . over 3000 university press. over 3000 children, aged 6 to 14 were asked for their word of the yean asked for their word of the year, with the most common response being climate change followed closely by war and coronation. director of oxford children's services helen freeman says it shows children's desire for meaningful change, climate change of course. two words, aren't they? this is gb
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news across the uk on tv , in news across the uk on tv, in your car, on digital radio and on your smart speaker. this is britain's news channel . britain's news channel. >> uh, well, hello and welcome to headliners. >> uh, we'll be reviewing the next day's newspapers with top comedians . comedians. >> i'm stephen allen here with two customers, mainly two cool customers, mainly because of the weather. >> it's leo kearse and josh howie. >> is very cold isn't it? >> it is very cold isn't it? >> it is very cold isn't it? >> it's so cold. >> before you two left the house, your jackets were red. >> yeah, that is how bad my nipples are. >> hard , but they always are >> so hard, but they always are when you do because it is a when you do tv because it is a thrill. the adrenaline, thrill. it is the adrenaline, cursing through body require thrill. it is the adrenaline, cursmakeup jgh body require thrill. it is the adrenaline, cursmakeup people body require thrill. it is the adrenaline, cursmakeup people prepare quire thrill. it is the adrenaline, cursmakeup people prepare them the makeup people prepare them that way. >> so that's how go. that's >> so that's how i go. that's why i've got, uh. >> leo, you're looking very smart i another thing >> yeah, i had a another thing to before so to go to before headliners. so i dress smarter i normally dress smarter than i normally do for headliners dress smarter than i normally do for hdidn'ters up for us. >> i didn't dress up for us. >> i didn't dress up for us. >> at disrespect. >> not at disrespect. >> not at disrespect. >> in anyway. chop
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>> headliners in anyway. chop chopped over here. chopped liver over here. >> what? you're looking. uh, josh? you're here? yeah, i didn't have a thing to. >> oh, wow . >> oh, wow. >> oh, wow. >> right. >> right. >> take a look your >> let's take a look at your front pages to the times. sunak hit by resignations and biggest rebellion yet . rebellion yet. >> the telegraph goes with 60 tories turn on pm in rwanda. >> rebellion . harder to say than >> rebellion. harder to say than i thought. the guardian says pm faces revolt on rwanda plans as senior tories quit the mirror goes with post office scandal about that time, the express says pm's last ditch plea to rebels come together on rwanda plan at the daily star. houston we have a moron and those are your front pages . let's get some your front pages. let's get some meat on the bones. >> uh, what's the times going with leo? >> so the times have got that story about the rwanda bill. it's it's the eve of the it's the. it's the eve of the key rwanda bill. it's rwanda bill. >> eve. >> eve. >> uh, i don't know if it will become christmas become as popular as christmas eve. been hit by
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eve. and sunak has been hit by resignations in his biggest rebellion yet. so there are 60 tory saying they're going to tory mps saying they're going to rebel or potentially could rebel against this bill. uh, only six say they definitely will vote against it. lee anderson and brendan clarke—smith have have resigned and i believe, um, and the key number is 3232 tories don't vote against this bill. it won't go through. >> but they've been trying to put through amendments to make legal challenges more difficult. so when asylum seekers i mean we say asylum seekers , really say asylum seekers, really they're just guys who want to come here, uh, when they arrive , come here, uh, when they arrive, they can just do endless taxpayer funded , uh, challenges taxpayer funded, uh, challenges against being deported or against being deported or against their asylum case being rejected. >> so, you know , there's no way >> so, you know, there's no way of stopping them. the system is totally broken. um, and there's apparently a whole bunch of moderate conservative mps who don't want these amendments to go through. they want people to be able to make infinite legal challenges against their asylum,
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uh, being refused . i mean, who uh, being refused. i mean, who are these conservative moderates? how can you be if you're a if you're why do you join the labour party ? what are join the labour party? what are you doing in the conservative party? it's supposed to be a conservative party. they're sitting there thinking, oh no, oh should let oh no, we should just let everybody have you have you >> it's like, have you have you spoken to the voters and, you know, heard what they want? >> obviously labour, uh, >> i mean, obviously labour, uh, i them wanting, i can understand them wanting, uh, numbers of people uh, infinite numbers of people to over channel because to come over the channel because they vote they think they're going to vote labour when they get registered. so it's way know, so it's a way of, you know, inflating their , their, uh, inflating their, their, uh, their electoral pool . their electoral pool. >> well, this is all according to leo, um, who's never wrong about exactly. uh, the moderate , about exactly. uh, the moderate, uh, parts of the conservative party, i imagine part of their concerns are the breaking of international law, and that international law, and that international law. oh we got our own laws. so well, we also are part of an international community. we also have i don't think it's a great look for us to be breaking international law. i think it's a great look. >> signal to the to >> it sends a signal to the to the all these little
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the these all these little apparatchiks the apparatchiks in the international community who lured little nations. it lured over little nations. it sends a signal that, like, you're you're stupid, bogus rules that you used to control other nations. we're going to break them . break them. >> well, this is the majority of the conservative party. we are talking potentially up 60 talking potentially up to 60 voters, voting against it. voters, uh, voting against it. we don't know. there's still hundreds of conservative, um, mps who disagree with you and think that this bill will be sufficient to get the rwanda scheme off the ground, join the green party hippies. it's an interesting because the article also information about, um, also has information about, um, also has information about, um, a survey of people's opinions about this whole rwanda and so even the people that they're trying to please by this, like, look, let's see how tough are. >> only 60% of conservative voters think it won't make a difference anyway. yeah. >> so you look how tough we are in delivering thing that you in delivering the thing that you don't even believe also, don't even believe in. also, the way it's phrased, way that it's phrased, the labour labour that labour labour saying that it's a waste taxpayers money waste of taxpayers money and it's work. it's it's not going to work. so it's not that i mean, i'm not saying that the reason they not that i mean, i'm not saying that want the reason they
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not that i mean, i'm not saying that want this reason they not that i mean, i'm not saying that want this bill;on they not that i mean, i'm not saying that want this bill to they not that i mean, i'm not saying that want this bill to go, they not that i mean, i'm not saying that want this bill to go, butey don't want this bill to go, but that's what they're phrasing it as . it's not that they are as. it's not that they are saying we want these people to come saying come in. they're just saying this it's going to this won't work. it's going to cost money. cost us too much money. >> why let cost us too much money. >:happen why let cost us too much money. >:happen ? why let it happen? >> because it breaks international law. what's the harm? >> oh. international law. i'm sick about sick of hearing about international law. >> waste of >> well, they said waste of taxpayers money. it wasn't just in sentence . in that sentence. >> yeah, we the taxpayers >> yeah, we waste the taxpayers money, we haven't tried it. money, but we haven't tried it. and taxpayers and also how much taxpayers money is being wasted on apparently each small boat that comes cost comes across the channel cost the £30 so so the taxpayer £30 million. so so that's an insane amount of money. and i think, you know, sending a few people to stop buying them . buying them. >> at we use a similar >> at least we use a similar flavour for the telegraph. josh, where are they going . yeah. well where are they going. yeah. well they've also gone with yeah 60 tories turn on pm in rwanda. but the story that i want to talk about , um, strictest about here is, um, strictest head teacher in high court for banning muslim prayer. now this is the head teacher, catherine. uh, bubble sing. yep. okay, cool . i follow on twitter a big fan
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of hers. she's turned around this school and made it one of the top schools in the country by being very by having by being very strict, by having these , um, these enforced these, um, these very enforced rules and one of them being no prayer rituals. and the argument, according to this young muslim student, is that islam requires rituals in order to pray. it's not like you can be christian and do it in your head. supposedly, that's what she's anyway, and it she's saying anyway, and it seems people , a bunch of seems like people, a bunch of muslim half muslim students and i think half the are students the students there are students are muslim, praying in in are muslim, were praying in in part of the playground and whatnot. so it was banned and, um, the issues here are, of course, freedom of religion, whatever . but but the proof is whatever. but but the proof is in the pudding. and these students are coming from all over the borough to go to this very special school, because the results they are getting , and it results they are getting, and it seems and because of this, and i hadnt seems and because of this, and i hadn't read about this before, but the school has been getting violent and threats and brick thrown, thrown through windows and whatever from essentially
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islamic fundamentalists protesting against it. and that's of course, what a wonderful way to prove what a great you should great religion you should be praying you're to praying to. if you're going to threaten madness . threaten the school and madness. >> yeah, you're taking this, leo. >> i think it's perfectly fair. i mean, jewish and christian prayer is encouraged in islamic madrassas in qatar. so yeah, why not? why not have it? no, i mean , how about if you want to pray, if you want to do all that stuff, how about you go to a different school? this is a school that doesn't allow prayer. it just it sort of reminds wider reminds me the sort of wider picture where you have, you know, coming other know, people coming from other countries live countries to come and live in the west because they want all the west because they want all the that the west has the good stuff that the west has got. then when get got. and then when they get here, like, but here, they're like, oh no, but we this way, and we want everything this way, and you're not allowed to this. you're not allowed to do this. you're to that. you're not allowed to do that. and, be and, you know, women should be covered like, covered and all this, it's like, well, did well, why, why did you why did you come here? you've you can have all that, you know, in you come here? you've you can have countries'ou know, in you come here? you've you can have countries that now, in you come here? you've you can have countries that havein you come here? you've you can have countries that have that other countries that have that culture. and i think, you know, this katharine this school, katharine birbalsingh, the head headmistress , she delivers headmistress, she delivers results . it's and surely that's
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results. it's and surely that's what matters no matter what, you know, religion , whatever sky god know, religion, whatever sky god you worship . you worship. >> uh, to the mirror next. leo. what are they going with? >> uh, so they have the boss of japanese tech giant fujitsu says there's a moral obligation clip it up. >> just authentic. yeah as i say, croissant . kwasi. yeah. say, croissant. kwasi. yeah. fujitsu >> uh, but he says there's a moral obligation to pay post office scandal compensation , office scandal compensation, which is going to be paid in the form of, uh, he's going to stab himself in the stomach with a big uh no, he's it's authentic. >> it's moving away from authentic back towards racism, i'm sure. >> think this is likely >> i think this is more likely he'll finger. he'll cut off his little finger. yeah, yeah, because is yeah, yeah, yeah, because it is a does. a bit of a it does. >> it's ring of >> it's got the ring of criminality about it. i really want now. criminality about it. i really wari now. criminality about it. i really wari like now. criminality about it. i really wari like i'm, i feel >> i feel like i'm, i feel like i'm dangerous comedian . it i'm a dangerous comedian. it feels you're gonna do an accent. fujitsu >> yeah . we've, uh we've >> yeah. we've, uh we've blackpill josh or red pill. i lose lose track of what colour the pills are supposed to be. maybe i'm a pill racist. anyway,
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uh, there's £1 billion. that's got be paid out in got to be paid out in compensation. they estimate . um, compensation. they estimate. um, and this guy, mr took charge of the post office in in september 2019. insists the organisation has now drastically changed since he he got he got back in touch but they were responsible for a lot of failures, not just the post office. uh, software failure , but also a big large failure, but also a big large scale nhs it system which cost an insane amount of money. and as i understand it didn't work. >> can i say two things about this? number one is the accent. fujitsu, fujitsu ? um, i'll it fujitsu, fujitsu? um, i'll do it in accent . fujitsu . in a french accent. fujitsu. french. anyway, the point one thing is that. yes. so this fujitsu boss says that they have a moral obligation to pay the post office scandal compensation once caught. yeah that's where your moral obligation comes from , from being busted. and someone gave him the phrase some pr said, say the word moral obugafion said, say the word moral obligation and you'll sound like a human being. and number a decent human being. and number two is the end of the two is at the end of the article. an eye was
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article. it says an eye tool was used add extra layer to used to add an extra layer to the the the editing process for the story. can any errors story. you can report any errors to the this is the mirror. that's the first time i've seen this action. this is like an this in action. this is like an a, is an ai story. no way. a, this is an ai story. no way. so we don't know how ai says fujitsu will be biased, isn't it? i will be favour of the it? i will be in favour of the tech course. hey, tech company, of course. hey, we don't mistakes were don't know what mistakes were made yeah, what is made or whatever. yeah, what is going it? yeah. with going on behind it? yeah. with this though, do you not this story though, do you not think all focus think that somehow all the focus has real bad has been moved off the real bad guys made guys because they. fujitsu made bad covered up postmasters? >> the postmasters ? no, the post >> the postmasters? no, the post office because all of the from my understanding of it. and that means watching all four episodes. >> that's that's all the research i've done, but all the extra money that was, know, extra money that was, you know, taken away from these innocent people end up in people didn't end up in fujitsu's pockets, ended up in the office's profit of coui'se. >> course. >> apparently the underpaid tax by £300 million from the, uh, i'm not sure exactly, because the way it worked. maybe that was another error in their accounting software . so yeah, accounting software. so yeah, the post office seems to be, you know, so far it's come out on
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top financially. well, yeah. >> but but now the guy who's beenin >> but but now the guy who's been in charge for the last couple basically couple of years, he's basically rocked and rocked up to this committee and said, yeah, don't know said, oh yeah, oh, i don't know how got paid and how much anyone got paid and i don't evidence don't have any evidence and i don't. like, on, don't. it's like, come on, man, that's not cool saying that. i do a couple of, uh, royal do own a couple of, uh, royal mail shares. so you know , that's mail shares. so you know, that's not look too deeply and. no, no, i want to say one more thing. it's, uh , kate moss's birthday. it's, uh, kate moss's birthday. there's a picture of kate moss on the front there, and i just want to say i met her at a party when i was 18 years old. and uh, i totally dissed her. i didn't know she was kate moss and, uh, friend of mine bumped into her a couple, a couple of months later and said, who's that guy? he was such beep. he was so rude. and such a beep. he was so rude. and it was because i. i just was like, oh yeah, yeah . oh, your like, oh yeah, yeah. oh, your name's kate. yeah. cool. right. and i walked off to my friend. anyway, just thought that made me . did it, me look kind of cool. did it, did not. maybe did it? no. maybe not. maybe not. if known it was her, i not. if i'd known it was her, i would. right now. she sat would. sure. right now. she sat around missing around with two of the missing out. this really out. you know this guy really dissed was
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dissed me. yeah. no, it was probably only person who probably the only person who ever dissed her. >> can that. is >> i can confirm that. that is how people who how josh speaks to people who aren't . thank you. i speak >> yes. thank you. i speak to leo. you're busy like that. um, final . final. >> what? prize winning journalism does the star have for us? josh >> uh, have the, uh, >> uh, they have the, uh, houston, uh , houston. houston houston, uh, houston. houston houston. how did they say it in houston? i'm trying to be. i just want to be not be accused of being racist and read all places. according houston places. according to the houston who's the, uh. have moron . who's the, uh. we have a moron. and it's about the space minister who doesn't know the sun . and is he talking out of sun. and is he talking out of uranus ? well, not mine, his uranus? well, not mine, his anus. well, that's what it says. yeah, that's he he he mixed up the sun and mars. what an idiot . the sun and mars. what an idiot. i didn't even know that. it's not going to change. that is pretty. pretty? that's pretty bad. i can understand jupiter is that if you're like, oh, that, you but the sun. come on, you know, but the sun. come on, one's a newspaper. that's a planet. this guy's . yeah. we'd planet. this guy's. yeah. we'd better on. so that's the better crack on. so that's the front page is done after the break, we'll be telling you the results general
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election. >> the american >> and probably the american one,
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>> you're listening to gb news radio . radio. >> welcome back to headliners i'm stephen allen, still here with one irishman short of a good joke. scotsman leo kearse, an englishman at josh howie and we move on to the telegraph now leo. >> and there's one man who could win the next election for the conservatives. name is mr conservatives. his name is mr mantaring, but can call him mantaring, but you can call him gerry . gerry. >> e'- @ good. so boundary >> yeah. very good. so boundary changes , which is what changes, which is what gerrymandering is what gerrymandering is, which is what steve about. i mean , steve was talking about. i mean, that a bigger swing that labour needs a bigger swing than 1997 to win the general election . ian. so the boundaries election. ian. so the boundaries have shifted . you know, have shifted. you know, according to demographic changes and, you know, more people move into an area you know, just to balance things out a bit, i guess. i mean, i'm sure the tories would never use it to give themselves an advantage because too good because they're they're too good for so sir keir starmer's because they're they're too good for is so sir keir starmer's because they're they're too good for is made rir keir starmer's because they're they're too good for is made harderstarmer's because they're they're too good for is made harder as rmer's because they're they're too good for is made harder as the r's because they're they're too good for is made harder as the new task is made harder as the new parliamentary constituencies give the conservatives a net
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gain . of seven seats. well, how gain. of seven seats. well, how about that? it did actually benefit the conservatives i've never have seen that coming . so never have seen that coming. so it looks like we're going to have election in the have a general election in the second of this year. uh, second half of this year. uh, and uh, yeah, i mean, the boundary changes do give a modest boost. and fortunately, um, there's a strong whatever the opposite of boost is, uh, by the opposite of boost is, uh, by the fact that the conservatives have long since given up trying to be conservative and look fated to. you'd need i don't know what you'd need to win this for the conservatives now. um, there it looks. you know, it's unimaginable that anybody other than keir starmer is going to be the prime minister. >> yeah. i mean, part of this is that people have moved from the north down to the north and from wales down to the south. turns not south. so it turns out not levelling the levelling up might be one of the few that help few things that could help the conservatives next conservatives at the next election. yeah, yeah. but the analysis the figures analysis of the figures are a bit it's kind bit weak, aren't they? it's kind of to boris of comparing it to the boris johnson and comparing johnson era. yes. and comparing it who was just such it to corbyn, who was just such a terrible leader for labour party. yeah. they want so they wanted area have wanted each area to have the similar number of figures in it.
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that's but because of that's and then but because of that, lost that, that means wales lost a whole bunch of seats, which traditionally labour traditionally has been a labour um , stronghold but actually um, stronghold but actually turns out most of the seats are coming from other parties. labour two, but the labour only loses two, but the lib lose some and the welsh lib dems lose some and the welsh party, that's called, party, whoever, that's called, loses places similar . party, whoever, that's called, loses places similar. claim loses some places similar. claim similar scenario played kumru or whatever. uh it's fujitsu you're going to get lots of letters, but you won't understand a word of them. exactly. um, so , so but of them. exactly. um, so, so but it's going to be offset by the fall of the snp if expected fall or somewhat fall up in scotland, obviously, well , which labour obviously, as well, which labour are expected to take seats are expected to take some seats there so says , um, there. so as leo says, um, welcome mr starmer, president, prime minister, son, president starmer, which country are we at. i know we got we got trump coming up to the telegraph . coming up to the telegraph. indeed josh. and normally when donald trump says iowa he follows it with hush money for what we did in that russian hotel. not this time. very hotel. but not this time. very good. trump wins iowa caucus landslide as desantis pips haley
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to second place. um trump got over half of the votes in that state. it was a very , uh, snowy state. it was a very, uh, snowy night . and but still, people night. and but still, people came out for trump. they loved trump. and it's looking worse and worse for people. people are saying there's no real way that anyone's going to catch up with him at this point. the momentum that he goes um , look, that he goes in, um, look, politics, things do change. anybody has watched west wing will know , uh, you just don't will know, uh, you just don't know what there could be a nuclear meltdown in california, and then that could change the whole election . whole outlook of the election. um, we can hope. yeah but, uh, so that's it. yeah. trump is looking increasingly like it's a shoo in at. and, um, yeah . so shoo in at. and, um, yeah. so i guess we're going to be talking a lot more about trump. well, unless he's easily precluded from some from being on the ballot in some states, is a tricky states, which is a tricky situation which looks like i mean, throwing mean, they're throwing everything at trump. >> all kinds >> they're using all kinds of lawfare to try hobble lawfare to try and hobble him and him down. and bring him down. >> those laws, those stupid laws . yeah. >> but glores, they seem like,
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oh, he's an insurrectionist oh, he's he's an insurrectionist because saying , have oh, he's he's an insurrectionist b
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have been cowards in terms of dealing with this issue, in terms dealing and terms of dealing with biden and trump and biden. yeah. >> yeah, absolutely. they've >> yeah, absolutely. and they've got vp. the best get got a terrible vp. the best get the analysis i read was to get someone else in as vp, and that might be able to someone competent and that might be able to uh, the democrats. to galvanise, uh, the democrats. >> but then you'd have to find a competent democrat as opposed to an incompetent democrat as opposed to republicans as american . american. >> okay. are there any other nationalities we've not insulted yet? again uh, to the guardian, leo, this is great britain. this is what we do. insult people. the guardian. leo, the uk is wasting money on out—of—date. >> it systems. but to be fair, we do have a fairly popular myspace page . myspace page. >> yeah. so yeah, the uk is wasting tens of billions of pounds on crumbling infrastructure and badly run projects. wow i never would have thought. oh my god, it's almost as if all those things that were told about government and the state and the public sector are true. so the spending watchdog ,
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true. so the spending watchdog, the national audit office, says the national audit office, says the smarter government can find huge savings for better public services . i huge savings for better public services. i don't huge savings for better public services . i don't know this services. i don't know this assumption by the spending watchdog that government can run like a nimble, agile, uh, you know, tech start—up is a nonsense . but, uh, but yeah, nonsense. but, uh, but yeah, apparently there's , uh, there's apparently there's, uh, there's five major areas that government can big can save money, uh, big infrastructure , managing infrastructure, managing buildings, buying . so buildings, buying. so procurement, it systems and reducing fraud and error. they missed the big one. just fire three quarters of everybody who works in the public sector. it'll the economy because it'll boost the economy because the private sector is crying out for labour. that's why you know businesses are saying, no, keep the keep the borders open. we need all these these workers, the workers are here. they're just nothing. they're just doing nothing. they're sitting for various local authorities. >> and as leo used to work, he knows what he's talking about. >> much more productive now . i'm >> much more productive now. i'm motivated. i try hard, uh , their motivated. i try hard, uh, their costs are going for the department of environment . department of environment. >> they are spending three quarters of their digital budget just to the old system
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just to keep the old system running . the ministry of defence running. the ministry of defence is on kit that dates is relying on kit that dates back to the cold war or so. they have just do . and this goes have to just do. and this goes to a sort of argument i made before just the last six years. years, regardless of the toxicity brexit and all that toxicity of brexit and all that stuff, has just held this country back from getting the running itself properly here. and this is what we're seeing now. and but also we're not helping by £100 helping ourselves by £100 billion of contracts or awarded a third of those weren't subject to competition. now, if you believe in capitalism, that that's the whole point, is it drives the price lower and you get a better deal if they're just going out to whoever is . just going out to whoever is. it's madness. >> but so much of the public sector can just be done away with. javier milei with. we need to javier milei the president the argentinian president to come just like, afuera come in and just be like, afuera , why have we , like arts council. why have we got an arts council? like if arts good people a ticket to arts good people buy a ticket to it, not, then they it, if it's not, then they won't. should a job won't. and you should get a job doing something else. >> a grant from >> do we not get a grant from them for doing comedy? >> case, get rid >> no. or in that case, get rid of them. >> yeah, it's bit labour says >> yeah, it's a bit labour says they're going do an open
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they're going to do an open a new money, new office of value for money, but we have office but we already have the office for responsibility . yeah for budget responsibility. yeah those two. so they're those are the two. so they're going more money by going to waste more money by opening office. opening another office. >> office will >> and each office will criticise the other ones, saying that it should cut, shut that it should be cut, shut down. >> w- >> yeah. good idea. >> yeah. good idea. >> uh, express and >> uh, the express josh. and here's a from past. here's a blast from the past. >> talk about >> we're going to talk about covid vaccines. >> we're going to talk about cov nextccines. >> we're going to talk about cov nextccineswe'll >> we're going to talk about covnextccineswe'll watching >> next thing we'll be watching tiger god what happened >> yeah. god what happened i didn't i gave up series two. uh, husband was found . whoa. yeah. husband was found. whoa. yeah. the one that got eaten by the tiger. >> yeah. >> yeah. >> can i just. dead husband's >> can ijust. dead husband's alive. are you serious? i'm very much serious. i just spent the last years convinced last few years just convinced she's guilty. oh, no. i've done very about her being she's guilty. oh, no. i've done vehusband. about her being she's guilty. oh, no. i've done vehusband. i about her being she's guilty. oh, no. i've done vehusband. i justabout her being she's guilty. oh, no. i've done vehusband. i just want her being she's guilty. oh, no. i've done vehusband. i just want hedo eing she's guilty. oh, no. i've done vehusband. i just want hedo an; a husband. i just want to do an impression of leo. so i'll say the husband's, like, husband's alive . alive. >> anyway, i'm gonna have to get this tray cleaned now. >> yeah, sorry about that. so, a refusal to have covid jabs unked refusal to have covid jabs linked over 7000 hospital linked to over 7000 hospital admissions and deaths . now, this admissions and deaths. now, this is incrediblyfrustrating admissions and deaths. now, this is incredibly frustrating and is an incredibly frustrating and short the express . short article in the express. uh, based on a study in the lancet where, um, if this does
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get clipped and goes viral, what's that going to sweating so much. yeah but you just did the most covid unfriendly thing you could possibly do. sorry about that. yeah. sorry, guys . um, but that. yeah. sorry, guys. um, but yeah , this is like my one of my yeah, this is like my one of my many bugbears , but they keep on many bugbears, but they keep on saying here, like, okay, so essentially people who didn't get the vaccine, they're saying 7000 and went to hospital and died, but they keep on saying , 7000 and went to hospital and died, but they keep on saying, i just want to hear about i don't care about the hostel people. i just want to hear about the people it could be people who died. so it could be 6999 and one 6999 went to hospital and one extra then you extra person died, and then you have to make other thing. well, how many the virus ? how many died from the virus? taking the thing deliberately, including hospital admissions here, is incredibly misleading. and that's what they did the whole way through covid, where it was just sort of like this many people are infected. i don't want to hear about infected. i want about people who've definitely died before i get scared. do you think the
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existing the express , do you existing the express, do you think the express. well, that's what so why what i'm saying. so weird. why is express sort of is it. why the express sort of going narrative . going following this narrative. yeah, but the fact they're yeah, but but the fact they're going calling yeah, but but the fact they're goin out calling yeah, but but the fact they're goin out or calling yeah, but but the fact they're goin out or whatever, calling yeah, but but the fact they're goin out or whatever, but.ing yeah, but but the fact they're goin out or whatever, but also that out or whatever, but also with being the lancet, with it being in the lancet, i don't why the express is don't know why the express is even it up. don't know why the express is evethen. it up. >> then. >> then. >> is m news for other >> this is just news for other doctors like, yeah, doctors to be like, oh yeah, this thing about vaccine doctors to be like, oh yeah, this than:hing about vaccine doctors to be like, oh yeah, this than nog about vaccine doctors to be like, oh yeah, this than no one'th vaccine doctors to be like, oh yeah, this than no one's actuallye rather than no one's actually trying to do a campaign to say you take it because of this. >> yeah, this was a low no one needs to notice it. >> news story. >> news story. >> doesn't >> and also it doesn't sound like mean, 7000 in like a lot. i mean, 7000 in the whole that's because whole country. that's because it's a country. there's at it's a big country. there's at least 14,000 here. so you know we're near risk we're not getting near risk numbers yet. and you know how many admissions to many hospital admissions due to the jab don't want to get the covid jab don't want to get us trouble with ofcom. us in trouble with ofcom. but you know, it does have some adverse reactions. >> there's 3 million. uh, that's it for part two. >> but coming up more tattooed people in the army and half of spanish men don't like feminism . spanish men don't like feminism. probably the bottom half. we'll see
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that happening earlier on gb news radio show .
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news radio show. >> welcome back to headliners to the express, josh and civil servants . were taught that one servants. were taught that one man's terrorist is another man's freedom fighter, but that second man is a terrorist. >> so, know, a thing. >> so, you know, that's a thing. >> so, you know, that's a thing. >> is the for me, the >> okay, this is the for me, the maddest night. maddest story of the night. tom tugendhat orders review of left wing civil servant training over indoctrination , fear. now this indoctrination, fear. now this is based on a article in the fathom journal and a stanley. she used to work for the government. was civil government. she was a civil servant. to servant. she went along to a course provided at king's college, university college, famous university all around world, about around the world, about terrorism , and she posits that terrorism, and she posits that this course was essentially a national security risk because the lecturers over these five weeks or so, they did the course , just said some mental stuff like, you know, one man's freedom fighter is another man's terrorist. and, uh, he's talking about condemning terrorism is endorsed ing the power of the strong over the weak , and that strong over the weak, and that we focus on prevent we shouldn't focus on prevent because inherently racist , because it's inherently racist, because it's inherently racist, because it's inherently racist, because it focuses on islamic extremism , even though 70% ish
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extremism, even though 70% ish of, uh, of uk terror attacks are islamist in nature . and then islamist in nature. and then things like joe rogan and douglas murray are far right. and how do we suppress them ? we and how do we suppress them? we need to find a way for society to suppress them. so all of this stuff and this has taught stuff and this has been taught to servants, people to our civil servants, people working for foreign office working for the foreign office or it just shows or whatever. so so it just shows the bias within the system and being perpetuated within academia . these people need to academia. these people need to be rooted out of academia , to be rooted out of academia, to rooted out of the civil service they're harming our country. they're harming our country. they're coming away believing these . terrorists are these thoughts. terrorists are like supporting terrorism. it's mental. >> yeah. they literally call hamas terrorists freedom fighters . it's insane. and also fighters. it's insane. and also king's college london is funded by hamas, by qatar. um, well, they're actually interchangeable, interchangeable terms , but they take millions of terms, but they take millions of pounds from qatar. and this happens a lot our happens with a lot of our colleges and wonder colleges. and then we wonder why, know , credos ideologies why, you know, credos ideologies that harm the west are being promoted and promulgated on university campuses. and this is
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essentially, you know, critical race theory that splits the world up into oppressors and oppressed. and you know, that manifests itself terrorists and the terrorists. >> yeah , yeah. >> yeah, yeah. >> yeah, yeah. >> but this is disgusting. but what's more disgusting is tom tugendhat , after 14 years of tugendhat, after 14 years of conservative rule , is finding conservative rule, is finding out that the government are supposedly conservative government is funding training for government employees. that is anti the government anti the west promotes terrorism is absolutely nonsense. we should have been we should have been right on this right from the start. people should be clapped in irons when they do this as it is. you know labour are going to be a of years and be in in a couple of years and it's going to be mandatory. it's all going to be mandatory. >> the times, leo. >> uh, to the times, leo. >> uh, to the times, leo. >> and the army turning >> and the army is turning away people with tattoos, which is odd because of this one word that military. odd because of this one word tha hey. military. >> hey. >> hey. >> yes , the strict rules on >> yes, the strict rules on tattoos are blamed for the army's recruitment crisis . so army's recruitment crisis. so young people with tattoos above the collar line or on their hands, uh, suffers from hay fever and asthma. uh people with a high body mass index and those
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who broke bones in childhood, or people to translate. yeah, people to translate. yeah, yeah, that's like basically obese people. i mean, agree , tattoos people. i mean, i agree, tattoos let people tattoos in let people with tattoos in the army. probably army. they'll probably probably be ones , you know what be the best ones, you know what i certainly terms i mean? certainly in terms of like, firms stuff, like, football firms and stuff, they're , you know, if they're usually, you know, if they're usually, you know, if they make little tiers they can make little like tiers for everyone they've murdered. >> like in prison, >> yeah. well like in prison, they're be it they're probably going to be it looks they're going to be looks like they're going to be quite looks like they're going to be qui'so don't you >> so you don't want to, you know, of ink . um, know, you'll run out of ink. um, but fat people i mean, come on, because people because a lot of these people have into the air have to be hoisted into the air and, know, parachuted into and, you know, parachuted into i've war movies . i've watched some war movies. so, yeah, press buttons so, yeah, maybe press buttons for some of them. do press buttons, i guess the fat ones could do that, but still could do that, but they're still going eat more food going to need to eat more food and but part the and stuff. but every part of the army, navy , the army, pretty much the navy, the marines, is missing the marines, everyone is missing the recruitment targets . and they're recruitment targets. and they're saying it's because, oh, they won't with tattoos . won't let people with tattoos. and the real reason is that the army has been promoting this sort of critical race theory, anti—white racism, and, you know, lgbt, q stuff. all the
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adverts are just, you know, super diverse, like it's , uh, super diverse, like it's, uh, you know, some sort of disney production. and i think that's just put , put production. and i think that's just put, put off. why would why would a white man, uh, who , uh, would a white man, uh, who, uh, you know, is from a generation because quite often people go into army are from into the army are from generation generation generation to generation after generation to generation after generation why generation goes in. and why would they go risk their would they go in and risk their lives for, for, uh, country, a regime actively seems to regime that actively seems to despise them ? despise them? >> okay, josh, they're not that diverse because they don't have people tattoos. people with face tattoos. >> uh, very good. yeah. i mean, this doesn't actually >> uh, very good. yeah. i mean, this anything )esn't actually >> uh, very good. yeah. i mean, this anything thatt actually >> uh, very good. yeah. i mean, this anything that leo tually >> uh, very good. yeah. i mean, this anything that leo talked say anything that leo talked about. real thing about this about. the real thing about this article, thing about article, the real thing about this article that they're this article is that they're taking too long to process the applications. so in the six months that they're waiting to see if their tattoos are precisely okay or if they're too overweight or whatever it is, or they broke a bone when they were a that are going, a kid, that people are going, wait need get wait a minute, i need to get a job. i mean, jobs job. i mean, they get jobs elsewhere is what this elsewhere so that is what this article it's article is actually about. it's not the tattoos. it's not even about the tattoos. it's about too about them taking too long. >> every year for more than a >> so every year for more than a decade, they've missed recruiting. recruiting, uh,
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target . target. >> because that's what this article how long? article is about. how long? >> not year backlog >> there's not a 15 year backlog in forums. people will be in these forums. people will be ready by time ready for retirement by the time they i mean, they go in. that's i mean, that's nonsense. they go in. that's i mean, that's but1sense. they go in. that's i mean, that's but1sensis this >> no, but this is what this article about. there's no article is about. there's no this article is about this this article is about i mean, basically patriotism, all the things need the things you need for a military sense military patriotism, a sense of nafion military patriotism, a sense of nation pride in your nation. >> they've all been beaten down. people been no , you're people have been told no, you're terrible. you're scum . uh, you terrible. you're scum. uh, you know, you've got to work for that in this article, but. that bit in this article, but. >> oh, i'm sorry for knowing more this, like, more than what's in this, like, little bit of photocopied article. the article. josh, i'm all about the article. josh, i'm all about the article , right? uh, to the article, right? uh, to the telegraph rolls. let's see what's in this article . what's in this article. >> uh, josh, spanish men are >> uh, josh, uh, spanish men are apparently feeling upset by feminism . when you're accustomed feminism. when you're accustomed to equality feels like to privilege equality feels like oppression. you're oppression. but when you're accustomed to privilege, oppression feels oppression oppression feels like oppression . proved nothing. . so you kind of proved nothing. there >> half spanish feel >> half of spanish men feel discriminated against amid feminism backlash. this is a study of , uh, a bunch of blokes study of, uh, a bunch of blokes and they're basically saying, because there's been a big shift
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in spanish culture with the left wing prime minister uh, pedro sanchez and, um , there's sanchez and, um, there's obviously needs maybe to readdress the balance, but they are feeling like, say, discriminated against. uh, and a third of women agree as well . third of women agree as well. uh, now they're saying here, like, again, they use these like very misleading. they go, oh, 28% of, uh , the pay gap has 28% of, uh, the pay gap has fallen between from 28% to 21. but this pay gap thing is much more complicated than even, you know, women tend to have children, and they go off work for a article. you're right. i take that back. let's not talk about that . and, uh , i'm just about that. and, uh, i'm just reading the article , right? no, reading the article, right? no, no, it's totally right. >> i mean, the pay gap has been there's been debunked by me . uh, there's been debunked by me. uh, and josh just in, it's a nonsense. you think companies , nonsense. you think companies, if they pay women , you know, a if they pay women, you know, a third less or whatever. every company would only hire women because you'd automatically get the results with, like,
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the same results with, like, much lesser results . we're a much lesser results. we're a better, better, better results. i it's a nonsense. i mean, it's a nonsense. obviously. uh , tend to be obviously. women, uh, tend to be more likely to have children because can't children because men can't have children unless you're guardian reader. unless you're a guardian reader. uh, that's that's where the uh, so that's that's where the where the pay gap comes from. >> yeah, but it's interesting that historically , that because it historically, uh, i'm going off article now, if mind second, if you don't mind for a second, uh, , um, spain has uh, historically, um, spain has obviously has has this kind of macho culture. so there is this idea to, um , i wonder if they're idea to, um, i wonder if they're pushing back quite quickly against what they see because there is an argument that, uh, in order to achieve this parity , in order to achieve this parity, to force it through that men are being discriminated against if we can just use the only thing that i happen to know about, which is the stand up world, there women been, there are women who have been, uh arguably pushed early in uh, arguably pushed early in their careers who aren't necessarily at the same level of some of the, uh, other teams , some of the, uh, other teams, uh, just all women . and no, they
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uh, just all women. and no, they were brilliantly funny. comedian women as well. but to get this 50% thing, there are brilliantly funny. >> come on. there's three of them that are brilliantly funny. >> okay. there's no i'd say 6 or 7 a lot that you can 6 or 7. well there's only about three brilliant male in my brilliant male comedians in my mind. room tonight . mind. but in this room tonight. hey, point the point of hey, but the point the point of it is, is that we have seen an unfairness here where something that was a meritocracy. how much do make people laugh? that was a meritocracy. how much do literallya people laugh? that was a meritocracy. how much do literally none3le laugh? that was a meritocracy. how much do literally none of laugh? that was a meritocracy. how much do literally none of thisgh? that was a meritocracy. how much do literally none of thisghfin >> literally none of this is in the that going to the article that i'm going to write to the times. >> leo and scottish people are shown to be tight. shown in adverts to be tight. >> they're not. some of them spend £110,000 on a camper van. >> yeah, well, we're very , uh, >> yeah, well, we're very, uh, we're very generous with the westminsters money. so scots depicted as tight fisted and working class in tv adverts. executives . admit using lazy executives. admit using lazy stereotypes . in a study on stereotypes. in a study on diversity and inclusivity in advertising. you know, i've learned . all stereotypes are learned. all stereotypes are 100% true all of the time . and 100% true all of the time. and scottish people are tight fisted and working class. i didn't i
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thought it was middle class when i was in scotland , and i had to i was in scotland, and i had to move to london to find out. i'm actually working and they actually working class and they also i think they also they see this. i think they the onto this as the project a bit onto this as well. they say they always put the ad executives say they always put scottish voice on a always put a scottish voice on a bank the stereotype bank ad, because the stereotype says tight. i don't says the really tight. i don't think why they it. think that's why they do it. it's always a yorkshire voice or a because a scottish voice because that's the trustworthy voice. and the most trustworthy voice. and if wants to buy a used if anybody wants to buy a used car and go to my patreon, no. but if you want somebody to be a little bit thick, they use west country if want to country accents. if you want to signify handed working signify dirty handed working class brummie in it class stick a brummie in it again, 100% accurate. and they say that you know social class is the last remaining acceptable stereotype the industry. um stereotype in the industry. um but in society, i mean look but and in society, i mean look at look at rochdale. uh, you've got, you know, the guardian and you the chattering classes got, you know, the guardian and you that, the chattering classes got, you know, the guardian and you that, th
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guardian just shut up about it and minimise it and obfuscate it. >> i'm going to go off article and i'm going to say that, um, what's interesting here when we're talking about scottish, we're talking about scottish, we're talking about scottish, we're talking scottish we're talking about scottish people . and we're people of colour. and when we're talking class, talking about working class, talking about working class people because there people of colour, because there are no white people and adverts anymore . yeah. that's, uh , part anymore. yeah. that's, uh, part three sorted coming up in the next bit. >> fruit juice is bad for you, but fat thighs are good for you . but fat thighs are good for you. i'm not sure if i can order those in local , but i'm not sure if i can order those in local, but i'll i'm not sure if i can order those in local , but i'll try. those in my local, but i'll try. uh,
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soon welcome back to headliners the telegraph. now, leo and china managed to clone a monkey. did they say or do they pop down to they say or do they pop down to the shop and buy one that the pet shop and buy one that looks same? the pet shop and buy one that loo hahaha.ime? >> hahaha. >> hahaha. >> monkey is first to >> so cloned monkey is first to survive in good health after 112 failed attempts. that's a lot failed attempts. so that's a lot of messed monkeys dying and of messed up monkeys dying and hideous bagging of monkey. so
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yeah, these chinese scientists , yeah, these chinese scientists, uh, have been successfully , uh, have been successfully, successfully cloned. uh, monkey . successfully cloned. uh, monkey. and it's so far lived for two years, uh, before dying from coronavirus. now . um, i'm sure coronavirus. now. um, i'm sure they'll they'll there's a cloning batus. they don't give them ideas, but they've cloned primates before. but cloning , primates before. but cloning, cloning of this kind of primates is prohibited in europe on ethical grounds . uh, but it's ethical grounds. uh, but it's conducted legally in china . and conducted legally in china. and this is why china will leap aheadin this is why china will leap ahead in this sort of research . ahead in this sort of research. you know, all the sort of, you know, brain research because they have it's completely they have it's a completely amoral system over there. it's like, you know, the nazis , how like, you know, the nazis, how they conducted experiments on prisoners and stuff like that. it's, uh, you know, similar stuff with uyghur stuff goes on with the uyghur muslims . uh, stuff goes on with the uyghur muslims. uh, mean, which muslims. uh, so, i mean, which is horrific, but is obviously horrific, but it does their science does mean that their science will probably advance . will will probably advance. >> but on cutting edge chimp technology . are we worried about technology. are we worried about that? this is actually the that? well this is actually the scope is wider than that because this this technology they developed because these these foetuses were failing basically
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because it didn't have strong enough embryos or something like that. >> uh, worked out flu— that. >> uh, worked out a way to >> uh, they worked out a way to also put the cells into a new, new embryo that was had a thick wall and they could use that potentially with people who are via a new sort of treatment for ivf. so that's quite interesting as well. make the foetus more viable. and the other thing they're saying is it's so difficult that, yes, they prove that you can now do a primate or whatever, but they're saying it's difficult it it's so difficult that it actually makes unlikely that we would clone humans. yeah. and also, you know, none of the, uh, dead animals, 112, uh, dead animals, they didn't go to waste. >> they all went into some form of stir fry. i'm sure, uh, to the daily mail. >> josh, experts say that thunder thighs are for good your health. >> really? because i find they make me struggle to breathe. >> well . ooh saucy. i don't know >> well. ooh saucy. i don't know why that . why that. >> is that what you meant? like the james bond ? you know, the the james bond? you know, the pierce brosnan? >> it must be that. yes. and
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action. >> t- >> what you meant. >> what you meant. >> i think meant, like, uh, >> i think he meant, like, uh, your face. i think it was around his face. well, it could be any. it could be man's thighs. been it could be a man's thighs. been an reaction. it could be a man's thighs. been an it reaction. it could be a man's thighs. been an it ambiguous. >> it was ambiguous. >> it was ambiguous. >> and that's why get away >> and that's why we get away with yeah. stop. >> and that's why we get away with really yeah. stop. >> and that's why we get away with really unlike h. stop. >> and that's why we get away with really unlike h. fit. p. and really unlike analyse it. okay. yeah >> he ambiguity. >> he ambiguity. >> . as much as i hate >> yeah. as much as i hate thunder thighs, is that what you call it? mean sorry, don't call it? i mean sorry, i don't know thunder thighs are good know why thunder thighs are good for your health. they improve your the your brain power, reduce the risk of heart failure, and could even help stop the effects of ageing . should pointed out ageing. it should be pointed out that mean is not that what they mean is not thunder mean people thunder thighs. they mean people with thighs. not fat with muscly thighs. not fat people with big old thighs . people with big old thighs. >> yeah, uh, and that's the danger of this article, because, you fat person you know, a fat person could read the headline, get, you read the headline, then get, you know, they're know, bored because they're notoriously think that notoriously lazy and think that their in some ways their fat legs are in some ways an asset. >> no, you've just got to have big, big muscles on your legs, because more if you do, it's because the more if you do, it's going to help you. after a heart attack the it helps attack because of the it helps the blood circulation. will the blood circulation. it will also stable also help keep you stable later in won't be falling. in life so you won't be falling. it also and i've read this before about squats, supposedly
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squatting is the much better than anything else than walking or anything else that you it some reason that you do it for. some reason it starts the it literally kick starts the brain testosterone as well, brain and testosterone as well, because it's the biggest muscles in the body. >> it produces they produce >> so it produces they produce the testosterone when you do it. >> the problem is, if you go too much, your testicles get too big, exactly big, and then it's exactly that's is the that's not squatting is the worst that isn't worst move in that case, isn't it? a cold floor. it? especially on a cold floor. yeah, the joke . yeah, that was the joke. >> uh, well, if we're explaining mine, we're re—explaining the times , leo and fruit juice may times, leo and fruit juice may make children fat kids these days. we had sunny delight to deal with, and we had cope deal with, and we had to cope with jaundice. deal with, and we had to cope witiyeah, jaundice. deal with, and we had to cope witiyeah, a jaundice. deal with, and we had to cope witiyeah, a daily1dice. deal with, and we had to cope witiyeah, a daily glass of fruit >> yeah, a daily glass of fruit juice cause children to gain juice may cause children to gain weight. experts or weight. according to experts or researchers . the university of researchers. the university of toronto, uh , so they want the toronto, uh, so they want the fruit juice is liquid calories, and the parents should limit their child's intake to prevent them growing , growing their child's intake to prevent them growing, growing up their child's intake to prevent them growing , growing up obese, them growing, growing up obese, or an unhealthy sweet or developing an unhealthy sweet tooth lasts a lifetime. so, tooth that lasts a lifetime. so, you know, a little bit of calories at every meal time from this and this fruit juice can add up and make and i guess there make you fat. and i guess there is decay. but think is the tooth decay. but i think this they they're
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this is ridiculous. they they're trying a sugar the sugar this is ridiculous. they they're tryi at a sugar the sugar this is ridiculous. they they're tryi at the a sugar the sugar this is ridiculous. they they're tryi at the moment.]ar the sugar this is ridiculous. they they're tryi at the moment. fruite sugar this is ridiculous. they they're tryi at the moment. fruit juice ar tax at the moment. fruit juice and milk based drinks aren't included in the sugar tax. they're push , uh, they're trying to push, uh, juice sugar tax. and juice into that sugar tax. and then kids will drink, um, you know, fizzy pop, sugar free fizzy pop and that's actually really dangerous. there's no vitamins in it, like orange juice. it's full of vitamins, and are full of and other juices are full of vitamins. even though it's vitamins. and even though it's got in it, know, got some sugar in it, you know, just the garden a few just run around the garden a few times, you burn off. it's times, you burn it off. it's much sugar free much better than sugar free stuff, the carbonated stuff, because the carbonated drinks, , rot your your teeth drinks, uh, rot your your teeth and your bones because they're acidic and, you know, the sugar free stuff, the, um, acid fame or whatever. it's like it's dodgy. it's dodgy stuff. sweeteners. yeah. there's actually sell fame as well . a actually sell fame as well. a different one, as is sulfinic. no, there is assessed as i remember the word that you're aiming for. >> it's not it can't do a minute's worth. >> we've got a minute left on the show would willingly the show and i would willingly sit here and try and guess long chain sweeteners. >> not cell >> a cell phone, not a cell phone, . phone, whatever. >> source of philately.
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>> yeah, a source of philately. the metro josh and upset is a game that involves throwing coins at children is to be banned. >> some people just do not like change. ancient game could be cancelled councillors cancelled because councillors insist throwing insist on throwing coins at children. insist on throwing coins at childrerthis is a game that's >> uh, this is a game that's played saint ives since the played in saint ives since the 16th and health and 16th century, and health and safety is going to be stepping 16th century, and health and sa'becauseying to be stepping 16th century, and health and sa'because thisto be stepping 16th century, and health and sa'because this is be stepping 16th century, and health and sa'because this is the ;tepping 16th century, and health and sa'because this is the game.g in because this is the game. they throw a ball a they throw a silver ball over a wall of a cornish parish church , wall of a cornish parish church, uh, to mark the consecration of the church in 1434. and then they move around and the ball goes back . this is why i'm never goes back. this is why i'm never going to move to cornwall . if going to move to cornwall. if this is entertainment, this is just how boring it was. 4 or 500 years ago. whatever because they got broadband, which is about three weeks ago. 40. yeah 700 years ago. this was entertainment. >> why does village in >> why does every village in britain ritual britain have some sort of ritual that punching britain have some sort of ritual that other punching britain have some sort of ritual that other in punching britain have some sort of ritual that other in the punching britain have some sort of ritual that other in the head?|ing britain have some sort of ritual that other in the head? somebody each other in the head? somebody always their hips or always breaks their hips or whatever. >> e show. w— done. so let's take >> so let's take another quick look pages. look at wednesday's front pages. uh, the times sunak hit by resignation and biggest rebellion yet . the telegraph rebellion yet. the telegraph goes with 60 tories turn on pm
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in rwanda rebellion. the guardian pm faces revolt on rwanda plans as senior tories quit the mirror post office scandal about time and the express goes with pm's last ditch plea to rebels come together on rwanda plan. the daily star goes with houston . we daily star goes with houston. we have a moron and those were your front pages. that's all we've got for. thank you to josh front pages. that's all we've got leo. for. thank you to josh front pages. that's all we've got leo. we're1ank you to josh front pages. that's all we've got leo. we're back/ou to josh front pages. that's all we've got leo. we're back tomorrow1 front pages. that's all we've got leo. we're back tomorrow at and leo. we're back tomorrow at 11 with andrew and nick and cressida. if you're watching at five, then stay tuned for breakfast. but until the next time, have a good one. >> like things are heating >> looks like things are heating up boxt boiler oilers, sponsors of whether on gb news . of whether on gb news. >> good evening alex burkill here with your latest gb news weather forecast. it is going to be cold tonight and with that the risk of some harsh frost, icy patches and had a little bit of further snow, a low pressure system across northern parts of the brought some the uk today brought some significant here. however, significant snow here. however, the worst of that is clearing away the east with just away towards the east with just
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some rain, sleet or some outbreaks of rain, sleet or snow their way snow pushing their way southwards . across parts of southwards. across parts of northern central england and wales. as we go through this evening and overnight, most of this breaking up, though, as it goes further north. clearer skies some snow skies for many, but some snow showers in, particularly showers feeding in, particularly to scotland. to northern parts of scotland. under , under those clear skies, temperatures plummeting some places fall into negative places could fall into negative double so a widespread double figures, so a widespread harsh and some icy patches harsh frost and some icy patches to watch out for as we go through wednesday. there is a system the south of us. system towards the south of us. this bit rain, this may bring a bit of rain, perhaps or . snow to perhaps some sleet or. snow to immediate southern counties, but for most of us it is actually going to stay largely dry. plenty winter sunshine plenty of winter sunshine on offer tomorrow, but there will be feeding be some snow showers feeding down brisk northerly wind, down on a brisk northerly wind, mainly affecting northern scotland. despite the sunshine, though , it is going feel though, it is going to feel cold. generally cold. temperatures generally only getting few degrees only getting a few degrees above freezing . more sunny freezing. more fine sunny weather as we go through weather to come as we go through thursday, that thursday, but we stick with that brisk northerly so more brisk northerly wind so more snow showers across northern brisk northerly wind so more snow of owers across northern brisk northerly wind so more snow of scotland oss northern brisk northerly wind so more snow of scotland ,;s northern brisk northerly wind so more snow of scotland , perhaps rn parts of scotland, perhaps northern and some northern ireland and some western and eastern coastal parts could see some wintry showers a time. most inland
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showers for a time. most inland areas, though dry and areas, though staying dry and fine more fine weather to fine with more fine weather to come go through come as we go through friday. but windier and but turning wet, windier and milder by the weekend . milder by the weekend. >> a brighter outlook with boxt solar sponsors of weather on .
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lee anderson a job. it's all going on. we will continue this conversation after the break with farage. but for now, chaps, thank you. thank you. at home tonight . tonight. >> while over 600 days ago we were promised that planes would go to rwanda, not a single plane is left. the conservative party divided in the house of commons tonight. also seen tonight. and we've also seen some resignations. also so quite some resignations. also so quite some drama on this side of the pondin some drama on this side of the pond in iowa last night. some drama on this side of the pond in iowa last night . and pond in iowa last night. and i'll be reporting live from the trump victory party here in iowa. it has been a massive win for donald j. trump. does that mean the primaries are over and
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he can get on with the campaign? but first, let's get the . news but first, let's get the. news >> well good evening . it's been >> well good evening. it's been a busy night tonight in parliament. parliament has been voting on the government's controversial rwanda bill, which aims to stop the small boats crisis . the aims to stop the small boats crisis. the amendment, tabled by bill cash has been rejected. you can see the scene live now in the commons. earlier mps voted 529 to 68. that's a majority of 461. well, the cash amendment was supported by the dup today. but the amendment tabled by the former immigration minister robert jenrick, was also defeated . mps voted 525 to 58. defeated. mps voted 525 to 58. a majority of 467. rebel mps fear the bill, as it stands, will overwhelm courts with appeals from asylum seekers as well. following the voting on the rwanda bill tonight, the tory deputy party chairman, lee
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anderson and brendan clarke—smith both resigned , clarke—smith both resigned, signed a resignation which the prime minister we understand in the last half an hour has accepted. they were told ahead of the vote that any mp on payroll who didn't vote in favour of the government's bill would be sacked. both have consistently argued that the government's rwanda legislation should be strengthened. they now say they don't want to distract the prime minister from his work on . illegal migration. well, on. illegal migration. well, also in the news today , oil also in the news today, oil pnces also in the news today, oil prices went up and a major oil company suspended its shipping routes in the middle east. oil giant shell indefinitely suspended all its shipments through the red sea that came as oil prices rose by 1. the governor of the bank of england, andrew bailey, just last week warning attacks in the region could impact prices here in the uk and on the military front, a united states official confirmed its planes targeted for houthi anti—ship missiles off the coast of yemen in fresh

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