tv Headliners GB News January 24, 2024 5:00am-6:01am GMT
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gb news. >> good evening with jp news. well the main story from the newsroom tonight. one of rishi sunak biggest supporters, sunak former biggest supporters, sir simon clarke , has called for sir simon clarke, has called for the prime minister to resign , the prime minister to resign, warning that the conservative party faces an election massacre unless he does. the senior tory mp wrote in a column for the daily telegraph that his party faced concern of extinction at the next general election. if rishi sunak didn't step aside. he said the party had lost key voters by failing to be bold on immigration. it follows multiple letters of no confidence that have been submitted against the prime in recent weeks. prime minister in recent weeks. shadow cabinet minister jonathan
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ashworth tonight it ashworth said tonight it developments are more proof of tory failure. the british people want a government focussed on their issues, their problems from the cost of living crisis with their mortgages going up that the tories have created to fixing the problems in the nhs, which the tories have delivered after 14 years. >> but instead we get these ongoing fights, squabbles, a divide government unable to grip the issues facing the country . i the issues facing the country. i think it's clear that after 14 years it's time for change and we need a party focussed on the people's priorities, and that would be the labour party. >> jonathan ashworth now severe winter weather is causing causing major travel disruption tonight as storm josslyn hits the uk with the met office warning the worst is yet to come. flights have been cancelled , trains suspended and cancelled, trains suspended and drivers are being warned to postpone any travel. the strongest winds of up to 80 mile an hour are expected through the rush hour tomorrow morning, before your storm. jocelyn eases
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. off the measles outbreak has been described as deeply troubling by labour saying there should be more action to kerb the spread of the disease. the shadow health minister, karen smith, said today red tape needs to be cut to give health visitors more powers to vaccinate children. that's as cases grow in the west midlands and parts of london and the world health organisation issued fresh warnings today following a surge across europe . a study by surge across europe. a study by oxford university suggests disinformation is to blame , with disinformation is to blame, with 1 in 5 people in the uk saying they think vaccine data is fake . they think vaccine data is fake. possible water contamination is being investigated at a housing estate near cambridge. residents at the marley development are facing their fifth day without drinkable tap water. the independent water network says it is safe for washing and showering. the cause of contamination , though, hasn't contamination, though, hasn't yet been confirmed. but the uk's health security agency says it is investigating. there are no
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reports of any illnesses so far, but people are being urged to use bottled or boiled water until further notice . that's the until further notice. that's the news on gb news across the uk, on tv, in your car, on digital radio and on your smart speaker. this is britain's news channel . this is britain's news channel. hello and welcome to headliners, your first look at the next day's newspapers in the company of top comedians. >> i'm stephen allan and tonight we have one comedian who's tall and one who's jewish. in the 90s, that would have been enough for sitcom. kearse for a sitcom. it's leo kearse and louis. and josh howie louis. >> both.7 and josh howie louis. >> you're both.7 and josh howie louis. >> you're enjoyingth.7 and josh howie louis. >> you're enjoying storm? >> you're enjoying storm? >> yeah , yeah, look, >> jocelyn yeah, yeah, you look, you uke >> jocelyn yeah, yeah, you look, you like you've you sound like you've gone through puberty. yeah. >> uh, it's a cold. >> i've, uh, it's a cold. >> oh, okay. i was excited about your test. yeah. for your test. yeah. thank you for bringing work. your test. yeah. thank you for bringing work . yeah, bringing it into work. yeah, because i'm freelance. and if i can get you contract people ill, i get more work. i've been
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licking everything in this. you should have just worn a mask. they're totally fine with people wearing it's wearing masks around here. it's really yeah really popular these days. yeah right. to the right. let's crack on to the front pages. start with the front pages. we start with the daily . god's why daily mail. in god's name. why wasn't he stopped? is there front page to the telegraph? uh, army chief, public face call . army chief, public face call. call up if uk goes to war. uh, the guardian says pm warns of more attacks in yemen as crisis grows . the times front page grows. the times front page grieving mother faces a monstrous triple killer. the eye news uk prepares for prolonged battle with yemen rebels . and battle with yemen rebels. and finally, the daily star exhume pele to prove he's my dad. those were your front pages . for first were your front pages. for first up, we go to the telegraph. leo >> so they lead with the public. face a call up if we go to war. military chief warns the general says the army is too small and
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the government needs to mobilise the government needs to mobilise the nation in the event of conflict with russia. >> this is general sir patrick and this comes after a senior nato official warned that there's we should prepare for all out war with russia in the next years, and we're next 20 years, and we're currently and currently in a recruitment and retention crisis across all the armed forces. and to be honest, who's going to fight who , who's who's going to fight who, who's like, go and fight years like, go and fight of a 20 years of these , like gimpy left of all these, like gimpy left wing calling me, hating wing people calling me, hating on me, denying me jobs and stuff because apparently got because apparently i've got toxic masculinity, a toxic masculinity, then all of a sudden going to want sudden they're going to want that toxic masculinity to go and fight no, you know fight for them. no, you know what? send all the send what? send, send all the send all the pronoun people send them in can be they can in first. they can be they can do can be the captain. do the they can be the captain. >> no, no, be amazing i >> -- >> send fi- fil- fil— >> send them in. first was really respectful . it shows that really respectful. it shows that you've and they them and you've grown and they them and first. no, they'd be amazing . first. no, they'd be amazing. they would just annoy the russians death. russians to death. >> yeah. be honest, >> yeah. and to be honest, i mean, we don't have a country anymore because country anymore because a country implies border that implies some sort of border that you over. we've implies some sort of border that you an over. we've implies some sort of border that you an economic over. we've implies some sort of border that you an economic platform,iie've implies some sort of border that you an economic platform, um, got an economic platform, um, with a with a revolving door . it
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with a with a revolving door. it says you know, an sense says so, you know, an any sense of patriotism or nationalism is battered down and people maybe, maybe that was a bad idea. maybe, maybe the nationalists and the patriots and the people with england flags. and with england flags. flags and scotland and union jacks scotland flags and union jacks are actually, you know , not not are actually, you know, not not the but maybe that's what the enemy, but maybe that's what we need is a war. >> bring everyone together. >> bring everyone together. >> bring everyone together. >> bring the left. right. the centrists, all of us together to fight against russia won't bring me together . me together. >> i'll be like, come on, xi jinping, i welcome you as my new overlord. >> we've done that already. yeah well, that's no different. but tension is a is a is a problem. but also. but there are some good news because applications to the army are the highest level they've been in six years. right. which kind of just goes against everything you just said. the problems were we said. three the problems were we did story week where the did a story last week where the problem that they were problem was that they were having was having problems where it was taking six months taking like six months to process these applications. but yeah, realise the yeah, i didn't realise that the navy only has 29,000 full time members. that's the british navy, great british navy are
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navy, the great british navy are reduced to 29,000 people. >> some of them are off sick. so, you know, once you get to down who's actually available, it's that many people. >> and if the up happens, >> and if the call up happens, people of are exempt. people of our age are exempt. i imagine we're old enough now to not have to worry about. >> i'd want to join up. i think it's a good way of losing weight. yeah. uh, get fit. >> want to shoot >> but i just want to shoot people i'm hanging out of people while i'm hanging out of a helicopter. i think, to be honest, there's going be honest, there's going to be a lot if do to war lot of people if we do go to war with russia, they're going to be like, maybe would like, oh, maybe, maybe it would have a good idea fully like, oh, maybe, maybe it would haveukraine.good idea fully like, oh, maybe, maybe it would haveukraine.maybeea fully like, oh, maybe, maybe it would haveukraine. maybe that fully like, oh, maybe, maybe it would have ukraine. maybe that maybe arm ukraine. maybe that maybe that policy. i don't that was a good policy. i don't mind paying like £2.50 extra in tax. get my tax. yeah if it saves me get my legs off. legs blown off. >> that is as josh says, >> well that is as josh says, one way lose weight. so one way to lose weight. so there's another story quickly about the story ousted about the big story about ousted or massacre about the big story about ousted or the massacre about the big story about ousted or the cabinet massacre about the big story about ousted or the cabinet allynassacre about the big story about ousted or the cabinet ally .assacre warms the cabinet ally. >> now we've been waiting all night. hearing the night. i've been hearing the news. exciting and news. it's very exciting and nothing much has happened since. this guy's come this guy's like, come on, everybody me. everybody follow me. >> . hello. hello >> guys. hello. hello >> guys. hello. hello >> so, mate, supposedly there's a cabinet minister in the in the
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wings. i heard that on patrick's show just now before i came in. so i fully informed. thank you. patrick uh, and we'll see, i guess. but, yes, so far, it's been a bit of a damp squid, but the tories are ruthless, and they will just when they sense that they're going to lose, they just they cut and isn't that the thing? >> they're ruthless, but good at focusing on winning, putting, winning over, winning the argument. and thing that argument. and one thing that would your chances would really lower your chances of winning is doing another leadership battle right now, wouldn't leadership battle right now, wouldrlt leadership battle right now, wouldri think they've got >> so i think they've got nothing the moment . >> so i think they've got nothing the moment. i nothing to lose at the moment. i mean, they've had mean, and also they've had rishi in really quite in for really quite statistically quite a long time for tory pm. it's been at for a tory pm. it's been at least three weeks. >> it's like dog years. >> it's like dog years. >> yeah, yeah, yeah. >> yeah, yeah, yeah. >> if they do swap now then >> but if they do swap now then it who's the it doesn't matter who's the leader. lose, then leader. when they lose, then there'll another election there'll be another election leadership when work leadership issue. when they work out, to the leader out, it's going to be the leader of the opposition. yeah. and then that's the gig to watch. of the opposition. yeah. and the whoeverhe gig to watch. of the opposition. yeah. and the whoeverhe gi�*selectatch. of the opposition. yeah. and the whoeverhe gi�*select will >> whoever they select will then be because be immediately deposed because they'll put in some policy that angers sort angers the, you know, the sort of pull the of people who really pull the strings. they'll be strings. and then they'll be replaced probably rishi
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again. yeah. hey, you look forward >> yeah. hey, you look forward to isn't it? and to it. it's fun, isn't it? and what's going on in the guardian? josh? yeah what's going on in the guardian? josithe, ah what's going on in the guardian? josithe, uh, pm warns of more >> the, uh, pm warns of more attacks as crisis grows attacks in yemen as crisis grows on uh, the uk did on monday. uh, the uk did a second. uh raf attack. airstrikes against, uh, the houthi forces who control the north of the country. i think north of the country. i think north and west. uh, they're still, uh, attacking, uh, vessels , international vessels vessels, international vessels that are going through , uh, the that are going through, uh, the red sea. so uh, this we don't really have an end in sight in this. i just think we just need to just kill them all. who ts that is, um, not yemenis and even houthi kids. no just yemeni. yemeni terrorists . yemeni. yemeni terrorists. right. so, uh, just, you know, do some more bombing. you're a big fan of. >> yeah, not the navy so much, but you're a big fan of our air superiority. yeah. >> no, i'm a big fan of the navy as well. i think let's get some more people in the uh, and more people in the navy. uh, and you some common ground. you can find some common ground. >> that's what'll solve >> maybe that's what'll solve it. if we find common ground with yeah um. yeah. with the houthis. yeah um. yeah. isn't this this story also has
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that element of. >> if you get in the way of our shopping, all of a sudden, as a nation, we're really focussed. and glib way and that's the glib way of saying the economic impact of this is the thing that makes us saying the economic impact of this attention. 1g that makes us pay attention. >> this be, uh, you >> yeah. this would be, uh, you know, percentage points on know, a few percentage points on a somewhere. know, a few percentage points on a yeah.omewhere. know, a few percentage points on a yeah. noewhere. know, a few percentage points on a yeah. no it here. know, a few percentage points on a yeah. no it makes a that's >> yeah. no it makes a that's why we went to iraq, right? yeah. course. yeah. of course. oil, everything. yeah. of course. oil, everyth it's interesting that the >> but it's interesting that the yemen used at point, yemen used to be at one point, it christian. then it a it was christian. then it was a multi—ethnic you multi—ethnic country. now, you know, islamists have come in know, the islamists have come in and destabilised and and completely destabilised and ruined there's some sort ruined it. and there's some sort of we could of lesson there that we could apply by and yeah apply by and follow. yeah >> interesting that what you're trying to say , it's subtle. trying to say, it's subtle. >> i didn't quite get there's an enigma. >> there's another story which is interesting. stay in school cuts death risk study. fine. so this year that you stay this is every year that you stay in school cuts risk in school cuts your risk of death and so if you're in death by 2. and so if you're in ten, if you stay in school for ten, if you stay in school for ten years, that's four for 5. >> maybe you should have been in school a bit longer, but it doesn't make any sense. that means that teachers should be
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immortal, so no one's done the stats on that. um, let's take a look at the mail now. leo. what they got? >> i just got that they had. >> i just got that they had. >> they have as notting, um, triple killer faces caught, sent dancing in god's name. why wasn't he stopped? so he was sectioned four times under the mental health act. he left a student. so scared, she leapt from her window. doesn't say how high up that window was, but yeah, it was a litany yeah, basically it was a litany of chances that left of missed chances that left a paranoid schizophrenic from guinea—bissau . i'm not even sure guinea—bissau. i'm not even sure where that is . um, free to roam where that is. um, free to roam a city before knifing three young people to death . or two young people to death. or two young people to death. or two young and one one middle aged? i believe so, yeah, absolutely. horrific incident. and it's, you know, gb news coverage has been criticised for apparently being a racist dog whistle. but if i don't know how you can talk about a case like this without mentioning, uh, you know, the fact that he's from guinea—bissau and he come to this country and, you know, i don't know, i mean , i think don't know, i mean, i think maybe if we were stricter about
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who we picked or , you know, or who we picked or, you know, or if we could send , uh, people if we could send, uh, people backif if we could send, uh, people back if they committed crimes or, you know, weren't model citizens, then, you know, maybe some of this could have been avoided. well, it's racist to say that he came over as a he's a student. >> um , and so , a student. >>um,andso,| a student. >> um , and so , i mean, it could >> um, and so, i mean, it could well have been an italian guy with mental health issues or whatever. i'd say race would play whatever. i'd say race would play a factor if these incidents , solutions that failed, these murder victims didn't go through their job murder victims didn't go through theirjob because of his ethnicity, then i could see it being a factor, which we've seen in previous cases . in previous cases. >> so the security guard at the manchester arena, when there's the bombing, the ariana grande grande bombing, he specifically didn't stop this guy who was obviously way out of place at the concert for , you know, the pop concert for, you know, teenage girls. uh, he didn't stop because he was afraid stop him because he was afraid of being of being racist of being accused of being racist and getting . into trouble. and then getting. into trouble. and i'm not saying the same sort of sort of thing happened here.
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but, you know , that is an but, you know, that is an instance of that happening. yeah. >> but obviously it's >> but it's obviously it's a failure. it's tragedy. you >> but it's obviously it's a failu at it's tragedy. you >> but it's obviously it's a failu at this tragedy. you >> but it's obviously it's a failu at this beautiful you >> but it's obviously it's a failu at this beautiful young look at this beautiful young woman and the, uh, the young man barnaby, who murdered and, barnaby, who was murdered and, uh, the elderly man, uh, and the and the elderly man, uh, and the and the elderly man, uh, the caretaker. it's just like, just the unnecessary ness. it's as it said. why wasn't he stopped it? and i mean, his the flatmates, his nickname was serial killer. i mean, come on, this is seems to be a recurring theme. >> like wayne cousin's nickname was was . i >> like wayne cousin's nickname was was. i think it was >> like wayne cousin's nickname was was . i think it was the rapist. >> i think anybody's nickname. um, yeah. my nickname is idiot. so i'm. i'm all right. and finally, josh, do the illuminations of the daily star. >> yeah . >> yeah. >> yeah. >> exhume pele to prove he's my dad. and this is incredible news from the daily star. because i didn't know that he was dead. so so i've been informed . uh, but so i've been informed. uh, but really, anybody could just come in and just say. i'm elvis's grandson , exhume elvis. yeah, grandson, exhume elvis. yeah, and that's a good idea. >> yeah. you think so? >> yeah. you think so? >> that could be, like, a whole thing.
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>> elvis's grandson. >> elvis's grandson. >> all right, keep it to yourself. >> the. and. sorry, is there more you want to about more you want to talk about another is there another story? say, is there anything story? it another story? say, is there any daily story? it another story? say, is there any daily i story? it another story? say, is there any daily i mean, tory? it another story? say, is there any daily i mean, the? it another story? say, is there any daily i mean, the daily star the daily i mean, the daily star doesn't wasting paper, does doesn't mind wasting paper, does it, on its front page. doesn't mind wasting paper, does it, iyeah. front page. doesn't mind wasting paper, does it, iyeah. yeah,3age. doesn't mind wasting paper, does it, iyeah. yeah, iige. doesn't mind wasting paper, does it, iyeah. yeah, i think can you >> yeah. yeah, i think can you do can i just do the speculatively. can i just exhume lots of celebrities? just to see? because i don't know, maybe you know, maybe maybe my mum, you know, put about don't even put it about also you don't even know could be a way of like, know it could be a way of like, is elvis really dead? >> could be that type >> yeah, it could be that type of and this be the of thing. and this would be the scam that get you to open scam that would get you to open the coffin. scam that would get you to open the somebody else in there? >> somebody else in there? >> somebody else in there? >> nice. yeah. all right, so we've got plans after the we've got plans for after the show, front page show, but that's the front page is next the met is done in the next bit. the met police china and
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>> you're listening to gb news radio . radio. >> welcome back to headliners. i'm steven allen here with leo kearse and josh howie. the guardian then leo. and good news for the police because they caught some criminals. bad news is where they found them. >> yeah . so they've caught >> yeah. so they've caught police so uk
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police as criminals. so a uk mass screening of police employees has led nine employees has led to nine criminal inquiries. employees has led to nine criminal inquiries . police criminal inquiries. police chiefs said the records of chiefs have said the records of 307,000 officers, staff and volunteers were checked against national intelligence database after recent scandals and they found nine more that nine investigations. so they're innocent until proven guilty. so the police are still 99.997, not criminals . or maybe they missed criminals. or maybe they missed a few . they were expecting to a few. they were expecting to get a lot more. uh, so the police said last year it was re—examine over a thousand past allegations against officers. you think, you know, across the whole country , they'd catch whole country, they'd catch a lot more , but apparently not. lot more, but apparently not. and they found 88 cases of, uh, disciplinary , his 139 cases disciplinary, his 139 cases where vetting needs to be reviewed and 100, 128 required management intervention. >> you do you do wonder why when someone applies to the police force, they don't do a background check on them. seemingly they do . well, they seemingly they do. well, they do, but they're not not this
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background , not this specific background, not this specific one. national intelligence database. yeah. that would that i don't know why they wouldn't just do that already. >> it only catches like one in every 300,000. well still it's just typing a name into a system surely. >> i mean it's probably even more automated than that these days. you just have days. why can't you just have a search that runs ? i mean, a search that runs? i mean, a spreadsheet would do it. a vertical table. vertical lookup table. >> your optic system that >> admire your optic system that a public sector intel source could be, could be, uh, automated in some way. >> this would do that spreadsheet for free for them. >> there's probably all scrolled on a on a clay tablet somewhere . on a on a clay tablet somewhere. >> the policing minister did want out that the vast want to point out that the vast majority over 99, majority of officers over 99, are working, are brave, hard working, dedicate rating to protecting the public. uh, march. every saturday, islamists and far left cranks calling for the destruction of the west, which is great. put it in there to the telegraph. >> josh and young people aren't drinking enough. uh, generation x are gonna have to step up and save the day again. and, yeah, this is actually sort of serious
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for us. >> we need. well, let me do that sober gen z z z. >> anyway, i stick with the z z. >> anyway, i stick with the z z. >> okay, joe. uh, sober gen z, leave treasury facing sin tax . leave treasury facing sin tax. tax. what i'm a drunk. sorry. i'm not. i've got the syntax. the syntax. black hole, warns the obr chief. so decline in alcohol and cigarette consumption is going put consumption is going to put pressure on public finances. we need that tax money and it's going down by billions because these stupid young people are not drinking enough alcohol. these stupid young people are not drinking enough alcohol . and not drinking enough alcohol. and there's issue there there's a real issue there because predicting our we because we're predicting our we don't much leeway we're don't have much leeway and we're predicting future taxes don't have much leeway and we're predic'on, future taxes don't have much leeway and we're predic'on, on ture taxes don't have much leeway and we're predic'on, on these ixes don't have much leeway and we're predic'on, on these what we're based on, on on these what we're going to raise through this. and because, uh, i just said the story , i don't need to repeat it again. >> but doesn't this also show how we get absolutely fiddled be honest and tell us what we're being taxed. i talk about kids getting fiddled rather than sneaking, sneaking the sneaking, sneaking around the side. taxes, side. these little hidden taxes, they paid they don't realise you're paid well. you go to well. yeah, whenever you go to a poorer country, you buy a packet of cigarettes. >> realise how tax >> you realise how much tax we pay >> you realise how much tax we pay this country because it's
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pay in this country because it's always about £0.20. uh, but wouldn't people not wouldn't want young people not drinking or not smoking. also save the country because save the country money because we have to treat we won't have to treat alcoholism and lung cancer as much as we would . and can't we much as we would. and can't we just introduce a tax on, i don't know, pronouns and vaping and you know, if you want to, if you want to have a fancy pronoun like a they, them or whatever in your email signature or twitter or then you or whatever, then you pay. you pay or whatever, then you pay. you pay for it. >> what about fortnite? like on the that is. well, the computer game that is. well, that's what the kids are doing nowadays. they're drinking. nowadays. they're not drinking. they're playing fortnite, they're just playing fortnite, minesweeper minecraft. they're just playing fortnite, mirwhat'sier minecraft. they're just playing fortnite, mirwhat'sit' minecraft. they're just playing fortnite, mirwhat's it called?3craft. they're just playing fortnite, mirwhat's it called? minesweeper >> what's it called? minesweeper >> what's it called? minesweeper >> they're they're on windows 95 and they crack and open wines . and they crack and open wines. >> that's what's going on. i'm hit the kids. hit with the kids. >> love space invaders. all right, to the telegraph, and right, to the telegraph, leo and other bbc claiming that the other bbc is claiming that the bbc biased. bbc is biased. >> how's unbiased so >> how's that for unbiased so jewish bbc staff lodge a formal complaint about antisemitism and gary lineker more than one complaint. >> and this this is, uh, these complaints have come after gary lineker shared and then deleted a message calling for israel to
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be banned from international football tournaments. uh, and he also shared a video of a discussion between people where they argued that israel was engagedin they argued that israel was engaged in genocidal killings. this is really , you know, this is really, you know, pretty, pretty full on nasty stuff. and uh, so the fact that gary lineker is allowed to freely do this on his social media without, you know, getting in any trouble, uh, and also the bbc's biased reporting of the coverage in gaza means that a lot of, uh, a lot of jewish staff are unhappy . it says here staff are unhappy. it says here so many, so many jews believe the bbc are anti—semitic . uh, so the bbc are anti—semitic. uh, so yeah, this is interesting that gary lineker tweets all this stuff about israel. he hasn't mentioned anything. he's been completely silent about muslims dying at the hands of other muslims. you know, in the middle east or in africa or muslims dying. um uh, at the hands of, uh, chinese people , the uighur uh, chinese people, the uighur muslims. so he does seem to be very selective. it does seem to
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be only when it's jews and only when jews are involved, that gary lineker gets upset, which is, ironically, just like nazis, except when it's jews getting murdered because he didn't tweet on october and then he on october seventh, and then he lied and that he did. lied and said that he did. >> yeah . but from >> yeah. uh, but apart from that, really have an that, i don't really have an opinion i know this is, opinion on this. i know this is, uh, we actually have a colleague who works here at gb news who used to work at the bbc and left in disgust with his bbc news is anti—semitism. this has been a long coming. this is not long time coming. this is not some phenomenon. they some new phenomenon. they did a i think macpherson. there some new phenomenon. they did a i thia: macpherson. there some new phenomenon. they did a i thia report macpherson. there some new phenomenon. they did a i thia report that:pherson. there some new phenomenon. they did a i thia report that cameon. there some new phenomenon. they did a i thi a report that came out there some new phenomenon. they did a i thi a report that came out thate was a report that came out that they into they wrote specifically into this, have never this, and the bbc have never released it all about anti—semitism within the bbc. um, and, and uh, having these employees, um, feel , feel unsafe employees, um, feel, feel unsafe at work. and i remember i know this isn't the bbc, the guardian had a similar thing. one of their employees wrote quit and wrote this letter about their experiences and how october seventh was minimised and even people laughing . uh, it's not people laughing. uh, it's not good. but when you certainly expect this from our national
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broadcaster , when it's meant to broadcaster, when it's meant to be impartial , broadcaster, when it's meant to be impartial, uh, it's not a good look for the bbc. and they haven't. the fact is that they haven't. the fact is that they haven't covered themselves in glory. the reporting of the hospital that got bombed by israel turns out it wasn't bombed by israel. and wasn't bombed by israel. and it wasn't bombed by israel. and it wasn't bombed at all. the hospital is a car myriad car park. there's been a myriad of different incidents. >> of the language as well. >> some of the language as well. you said that israel's happy you said that the israel's happy to civilians. i mean, to kill civilians. i mean, that's that's weighted language . that's that's weighted language. yeah, yeah, yeah. >> and some things just outright lies. so um, i'm glad i don't work at the bbc. uh, not that they'd have me , but this is a they'd have me, but this is a this is this is, uh, we are paying this is this is, uh, we are paying our fees to them. >> oh, no, he's not. >> oh, no, he's not. >> oh, you're not. okay, well, why would you pay for something you don't have to pay? well, i'm paying you don't have to pay? well, i'm paying my. but what they're looking government is looking at, the government is changing the relationship with ofcom. moment, ofcom. because at the moment, the bbc, will take any the bbc, they will take any complaints internally and then deal and go, oh, deal with it. and then go, oh, it's marking your own it's like marking your own homework and then go, yeah, it's like marking your own homegive and then go, yeah, it's like marking your own homegive anoh1en go, yeah, it's like marking your own homegive anoh1en yeaho, yeah,
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we'll give it. oh well yeah okay. ofcom look at it okay. we'll let ofcom look at it now. and now it seems like ofcom is going bit more is going to have a bit more power, which is good. i'm still smarting from what in smarting from what happened in the hanukkah bus two years ago, where they basically the bbc lied and said that the jewish kids had been insulting muslims and they weren't. they were just speaking in and was speaking in hebrew and it was mistranslated. it proven mistranslated. it was proven extensively that this isn't what happened. they've still got on their website as such, and they've never explained any culpability or anybody who could be blamed. i think they're disgusting. there's no accountability there . accountability there. >> to the times. josh and in a surprising plot twist , here's surprising plot twist, here's a story where leo will be on the side of some muslims. >> yeah, all right, well, nate nation, after nation condemns china's persecution of the uyghurs. is at the un. uh, uyghurs. this is at the un. uh, who knew that the un could actually be useful or do something morally right ? actually be useful or do something morally right? and actually be useful or do something morally right ? and 160 something morally right? and 160 countries spoke up and told china to improve its human rights record. of course, iran and various other countries were
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not part of that. we're talking about the hong kong national security law, which is cut down on protests, people to be on protests, allow people to be surveilled . uh, uh, much more surveilled. uh, uh, much more surveillance and basically cut down all protests . down on on all the protests. they're allowed to be arrested. and their treatment and of course, their treatment of now, it's of the uighurs. now, it's interesting that you you interesting that you what you were about about, were saying before about about, um, the uyghurs fighting day in and day out online, the people you're fighting against, these seemingly pro—palestinian people, you look at their timelines, no mention of the uighurs i've been talking about and promoting what the awareness of this for years now. yet the same people, when it comes to muslims being killed elsewhere, are totally not interested. and certainly when it comes to muslims killing other muslims . muslims killing other muslims. so the massive hypocrisy here and china, it's hard to spell the uyghurs. yes the we the you know, it took me two years to learn how to spell. yeah it was a choice i would, but even they don't even have to spell palestinians. that's the crazy thing. they plasticine. yeah. so, good that the un
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so, uh, it's good that the un has spoken out. china's just sort of gone. yeah, whatever. yeah >> basically they they try and paint themselves in glory at the end about how good they are. >> but just to provide some balance for ofcom, there aren't any grooming gangs in china. and balance for ofcom, there aren't any not)ming gangs in china. and balance for ofcom, there aren't any not sayingjangs in china. and balance for ofcom, there aren't any not saying that, in china. and balance for ofcom, there aren't any not saying that, you hina. and balance for ofcom, there aren't any not saying that, you know, ind i'm not saying that, you know, china's uyghur china's treatment of the uyghur muslims good. obviously it's muslims is good. obviously it's terrible. persecution is . terrible. this persecution is. but there's a happy medium but maybe there's a happy medium between, you know, the between, um, you know, the persecution of the uyghurs and literally enabling paedophilia on an industrial scale. >> is this because i intro'd it saying you'd be on the side of some muslims and you thought you saw it as a challenge? >> yes, i did, i should have seen coming. seen that coming. >> express now, leo and >> uh, the express now, leo and we know why the us free we know why the uk, us free trade deal didn't work they trade deal didn't work and they still for teeth still owe us for that. teeth thrown in the water anyway. >> so which , ironically, is how >> so which, ironically, is how you make tea. uh, can we? badenoch blames job biden for scuppering us free trade scuppering uk, us free trade deal scuppering uk, us free trade deal. business sector is deal. so the business sector is blamed the american president for frustrate ing the post—brexit plans for a trade deal.
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post—brexit plans for a trade deal . uh also post—brexit plans for a trade deal. uh also uh , it's not post—brexit plans for a trade deal . uh also uh , it's not the deal. uh also uh, it's not the tories fault. apparently so they're not doing free trade arrangements with anyone. uh, so it's not about, you know, she says it's not about us. despite what you might read about, uh, about it in the guardian and, uh , interestingly, biden continued , for all that, he said he was going to be massive break from going to be a massive break from trump and have all the opposite policies. continued. policies. he continued. trump's isolationist, isolationist approach to trade with tariffs on imports and a trade war with china, which this is part of. there's no free trade agreements with, uh, with other parts of the world because he wants to keep the trade inside america as much as possible . much as possible. >> i like that. it's like >> i feel like that. it's like someone dating someone deliberately not dating someone deliberately not dating someone just to have an someone else, just to have an excuse to not date you. okay i don't want to be paranoid. >> it's interesting that you've turned it to that. what happened? josh? who was it who didn't? who said they weren't dating because weren't dating you? because they weren't dating you? because they weren't dating leo beautiful dating right now? leo beautiful mental that you can enjoy mental image that you can enjoy through the break. we've met the halfway point in the next
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>> you're listening to gb news radio . radio. >> welcome back to headliners to the times. josh and it looks like the open university isn't that open after all. well, oh yeah. that open after all. well, oh yeah . open university academic yeah. open university academic wins tribunal over gender critical views . critical views. >> this is professor joe phoenix . this is another victory for gender critical people . well, gender critical people. well, essentially, um , after essentially, um, after criticising stonewall charity, she was , uh, she's been found to she was, uh, she's been found to be constructively dismissed by, by, uh, the university she was on woman's hour this morning on, on woman's hour this morning on, on radio four, which is kind of a bit of breakthrough because a bit of a breakthrough because women's tend to prefer to
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women's hour tend to prefer to put on trans women than actual women. uh, so she was on she talked about the trauma of being there was about 350 of her colleagues signing letters against her people, calling her against her people, calling her a racist , against her people, calling her a racist, applying that she's racist and transphobic, and she hasn't said anything transphobic at all, just standing up for sex based rights and, uh, so this is one other, um, link . there's one other, um, link. there's been a few of these cases brought forward by feminists , by women. >> yeah, there's rachel mead , >> yeah, there's rachel mead, there's maya forstater twisted four starter. >> yeah, this as she likes to be called an. >> and she'll sue you. uh and all of them have come out as victory because it seems like only in the courts do we actually see some sanity, which is what we've seen here. the mad thing is, at the end, though, tim blackman, who's the vice chancellor of the of the open university, said that the university disappointed university was disappointed by the judgement . no, tim, why the judgement. no, tim, why don't you be disappointed by your university's behaviour? that's what you should be
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disappointed on. you have been found guilty and it's like , have found guilty and it's like, have you learned anything? but by the last few years and this poor professor has been sort of ostracised. >> it's horrible. and what's interesting is a lot of, uh, you universities and other institutions, businesses and all the of it think that the rest of it think that there's legislation that requires and requires diversity, equity and inclusion requires, you inclusion and requires, you know, gender critical beliefs to be slapped down and, uh, you know, white people to be discriminated against. but actually, legislation actually, the legislation that they requires these rules they think requires these rules defends the equality act defends people. the equality act defends people. the equality act defends the right to have gender critical, biology based or , you critical, biology based or, you know, real life, uh, real life opinions that are based in reality as opposed to, uh, as opposed to twitter in 2016. >> and that explains why the courts then do their job. the question that's hidden here, then, is where is this perception coming from that the law works the other law actually works the other way? and stonewall and way? stonewall and stonewall and also, diversity , equity also, i mean, diversity, equity and exploded as a and inclusion is exploded as a as a business. >> and it's through every hr department. they don't have department. and they don't have the they don't really understand
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all to be all the legislation to be honest. not smartest honest. they're not the smartest people. wouldn't people. otherwise they wouldn't work what conservative work in hr. so what conservative conservatives are doing now or what, you know , gender realists what, you know, gender realists and people like that are doing now actually law firms now is actually suing law firms when out line, when they step out of line, when they because then they get it wrong, because then they get it wrong, because then the firms , uh, provide the law firms, uh, provide advice corporations advice to all the corporations and all the organisations. so it's a way of getting the it's a quick way of getting the advice out rather suing advice out rather than suing everybody. advice out rather than suing evethat's. interesting thing. >> that's an interesting thing. >> that's an interesting thing. >> was uh, there's >> yeah. that was uh, there's a very damning part of in the fight in the judge's findings where said, where he basically said, you know, academics and know, you're all academics and you work with facts and reason, yet you basically none of you had any was the gist of that was the gist of it. >> uh, to the daily mail. leo in america, gen z voters are getting less religious, and that's awkward for biden , who that's awkward for biden, who might have to tell god personally there's a cold snap. >> yeah, so, uh, the 41 million gen z voters who will decide the 2024 election are by far the most lgbtq cohort to date. >> and they're ditching christianity , conservatism and christianity, conservatism and the republican party, according to this, this survey. uh, so,
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alejandra caraballo , a harvard alejandra caraballo, a harvard academic and male to female trans influencer, obviously , uh, trans influencer, obviously, uh, the survey results showed that it's over for white christian male hegemony in the united states. it's time for an egalitarian inequity society. i mean, it's not, you know, minorities get a leg up . and as minorities get a leg up. and as we've seen in all the court cases, they frequently get sued for giving people a discriminatory leg up. uh, but, yeah, more than a quarter of gen z voters say that they're lgbtq, which is a much bigger share than previous groups. so baby boomers, only 4% of them are willing to admit they like willing to admit that they like a little, uh, shuffle behind the bushes. um, but, yeah, i mean, i think for, for today's generation, it's just a badge because none of them are actually having sex. none of them are having sex. so it's just i've got my just like, oh, i've got my pronouns this is what my identifiers. don't care, i've identifiers. i don't care, i've got if you don't have skin , got no. if you don't have skin, if you're not getting down the sauna getting at it,
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sauna and getting getting at it, then i've got no respect for you . you can't just identify your way the lgbtq, uh, list, way onto the lgbtq, uh, list, but i don't know. it seems that this generation are becoming more left more sort of communist left leaning socialists want to destroy and destroy humanity and civilisation. i think, you know, every few generations, we've just horrific mistakes. >> it's just i mistakes. >> it'sjust i think mistakes. >> it's just i think it's course correcting tail of correcting with the tail end of that. my son's generation feels like they're they looked at the kids a couple of years older and just like roll their eyes at them. but yeah, as you say, lgbtq+ essentially means you dye your hair blue. i think to be able to be part of that, an acronym, uh, you have to have sex with someone of the same sex. yeah. and that's you have to prove it and you have to show photos. yeah and then you can be like, yes, i'm lgbtq as it is. it's the idea that 25% of generation z are lgbt. is just a lie. i'll be judging. >> we'll be standing live. judge. judging >> there are people who consider themselves part of the lgbtq because they're tall , genuinely. because they're tall, genuinely. so it's just a catch all for
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anything that they consider not being a straight white person. >> you can understand why the plus at the end does imply height. yeah, well the plus includes yeah, paedophilia or whatever it is. >> yeah. >> yeah. >> see it comedy like >> you see it in comedy like sophie for example, you sophie hagan for example, you know, came out and said, uh, well queer. well she's queer. >> size, dress >> i did it dress size, dress size. >> sorry . >> sorry. >> sorry. >> she said, i identify as queen >> she said, i identify as queer. i've never actually had sex. >> sex. >> you're not, you know, you can't. >> there's people literally fought and died , you know, i fought and died, you know, i mean, there are people dying in the world still. >> yeah. for gay and or >> yeah. for being gay and or being bisexual. >> all the privilege points by just identifying , saying, by the just identifying, saying, by the way, i just want to so. way, i just want to say so. >> saying that, >> so they're saying that, you know, , is he going to know, biden, is he going to appeal this but the appeal to this group? but the thing not going thing is, they're not going to vote biden so it's vote for biden anyway. so it's like, so they if makes like, so if they if he makes that mistake of oh, i'm that mistake of going, oh, i'm going all of policies going to do all of my policies to win you over. well, first of all, they're not going to vote for not for him because they're just not voting. want to voting. they just want to destroy west. and secondly, destroy the west. and secondly, they, just going they, um, they it's just going to middle ground. to alienate the middle ground. >> they're never going
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>> but also they're never going to trumpers, they to be trumpers, even if they might biden. these are might not vote biden. these are a bunch of people who aren't going trump. yes. so going to vote trump. yes. so yeah, does it yeah, what difference does it make? story makes make? the whole story makes it look they're to look like they're going to decide they decide the election. well, they were going be a trump were never going to be a trump voter so know, yeah. voter anyway. so you know, yeah. well the well wasted paper again. the times tories had times josh young tories had a port policy event where they port and policy event where they talked sinking migrant talked about sinking migrant boats. that boats. so they won't need that port. yeah >> yeah. >> yeah. >> young tories debate invading yemen and sinking migrant boats. now this is obviously unfortunate because that was after a weekend migrants after a weekend where migrants drowned in the channel uh, so having these kind of events and putting those out on instagram or various social media with pictures sinking boats, they pictures of sinking boats, they ain't a good idea what what is fine is to debate this stuff, and it doesn't have to be tories or young tories or whatever debating it. every part of the political spectrum needs to be talking about immigration and talking about immigration and talking about immigration and talking about the pros and the cons, and also how to control it. so that is fine. but
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arguably the language and the images they use were not in good taste. yeah. >> and i think debating clubs they play devil's advocate. and this is obviously, you know, a joke just because it's a good idea doesn't mean that can't idea doesn't mean that it can't also be a joke. >> they probably going also be a joke. >> do |ey probably going also be a joke. >> do |ey prolyeah. going to do it. no. yeah. >> they were going to talk about it. and practice debating it. and practice their debating skills which don't necessarily relate to, you know, debating societies really about societies aren't really about it's about playing devil's advocate and about, know, advocate and about, you know, that positioning . yes. that lawyerly positioning. yes. >> isn't . >> it isn't. >> it isn't. >> he's good. the guardian, leo and a minister claims that the bbc's news quiz kept attacking the tories on a day when loads of tories have been attacking the tories. it's catching . the tories. it's catching. >> so bbc radio four's news quiz is completely biased. a minister has claimed. so this is huw merriman , a transport minister merriman, a transport minister who also referenced the bbc's coverage of universal credit . coverage of universal credit. when challenged to give examples of supposed supposed bias. a day after a row was sparked by remarks by the culture secretary, liz lucy frazer, who accused the corporation of bias
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as well and argued that it needed to adapt or risk losing the trust of audiences. uh so i mean, yeah, there is massive bias in bbc comedy. they actually the daily mail looked at all the bbc's comedy output and of all the comedians who've got, uh , an overt political got, uh, an overt political stance, 98% of them are left wing and 2% are geoff norcott. so that gives you some kind of, you know, idea about the about the bias there. >> the universal credit thing is an interesting example, though, because the guy who developed the system also criticised it. so harsh to say why so it's a bit harsh to say why are bbc being mean about a are the bbc being mean about a thing that many people think has flaws? when you listen to flaws? but when you do listen to news it's un bearably smug. >> i'm not a tory voter, but it's just like every joke and it's just like every joke and it's just like every joke and it's just cheap. uh, just cheap shots. really? yeah. and the other thing is, of course, tories are in power now. if they keep that going when and if labour get into power, then you could argue that it's fine, but it's just bad. could argue that it's fine, but it'sjust bad. i get could argue that it's fine, but it's just bad. i get insulted by the lazy comedy element . of it.
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the lazy comedy element. of it. >> sorry . um, the daily mail, >> sorry. um, the daily mail, josh and chinese tourists called a pianist racist even though he wasn't playing chopsticks. >> you shouldn't have done the accent . accent. >> it's. you're cold. sorry uh, a boogie woogie piano player last night slammed police for siding with the ludicrous demands made by flag waving chinese tourists to not film. i know this guy. he's playing piano in. they've got those pianos around london in, uh, saint pancras station in this case. and in the background , case. and in the background, some chinese people, they're filming a tv show, i believe, and they come over to him and he's live streaming it. uh his piano playing, and they're like, oh, do you mind not filming? and they polite they start off very polite and then gets out of then it all gets a bit out of control and they're like, look, it's against the law in china. and like, yeah, well, we and he was like, yeah, well, we ain't they're ain't in china. and they're like, it's like, ain't in china. and they're likeyou it's like, ain't in china. and they're likeyou can't it's like, ain't in china. and they're likeyou can't just it's like, ain't in china. and they're likeyou can't just tell like, ain't in china. and they're likeyou can't just tell citizens no, you can't just tell citizens here is public space. as here this is a public space. as here this is a public space. as he pointed out to them. and so no, i have totally the right if you want in the you don't want to be in the shot, move. uh, but then in a
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concentration we. concentration camp, we. >> the uyghur, uh, but >> yeah, the uyghur, uh, but police came over. >> they've slightly changed the headune >> they've slightly changed the headline here from the reality is one police the ultimate the police did back him. but one policeman. policewoman said, look, don't film this. don't put it. but they i think she was talking about her interaction with as much that. but with it as much as that. but yes, quite unnerving that yes, it is quite unnerving that chinese people can come over here. and she said she worked for a tv show and just sort of expect, know you're in a different we have different country. we have different country. we have different allowed different country. we have diffilm |t allowed different country. we have diffilm in allowed different country. we have diffilm in public allowed different country. we have diffilm in public and allowed different country. we have diffilm in public and if|llowed different country. we have diffilm in public and if you�*ed to film in public and if you don't like it long over it, yeah, that's the thing here, isn't just people in tv are >> it's just people in tv are insufferable. the idea that just because tv, your because you're working tv, your opinion much. opinion is worth that much. yeah. oh opinion is worth that much. yeaoh, h disagree with that, >> oh, i disagree with that, steve. i think i think calling people are calling people racist should a hate crime . if should be a hate crime. if you're talk about you're going to talk about something cause something that's going to cause hurt and damage, hurt and upset and damage, somebody's reputation, somebody's life and reputation, calling racist is way calling someone a racist is way worse any, you know, actual worse than any, you know, actual racist you use. racist epithet you could use. uh, so , uh, straight away, we uh, so, uh, straight away, we need to we to bring that in. >> i agree that it's not good
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calling racist, but calling people racist, but i think other think calling people some other stuff hurt . stuff can hurt. >> sorry, josh . um, final >> sorry, josh. um, final section coming up, the oscars upset barbie fans because apparently they're grown ups now. and a naked artist has problems with museum members. uh, we'll get the details
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next week. welcome back to headliners and straight into the, er, daily star. uh leo, upset that barbie didn't get the right nominations at the oscars . all right, don't at the oscars. all right, don't throw yourself out of the pram. >> fans fume . the >> so barbie fans fume. the oscars missed the point as margot robbie and greta gerwig are the star and director of it, have been snubbed for oscars. so no nomination for margot robbie or greta gerwig, they say. but ryan gosling gets one. literally the whole point of barbie the whole point of the barbie film. who film. literally. the people who have the have missed the point of the barbie are these fans who barbie film are these fans who don't understand that it's not this, this barbie film isn't
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about smashing the patriarchy. ken the patriarchy . he ken takes on the patriarchy. he bnngs ken takes on the patriarchy. he brings the patriarchy back to barbie land, and it turns out to be the best thing. and he loves it. patriarchy is brilliant. it. and patriarchy is brilliant. and comes the and everybody comes out of the cinema saying, yeah, patriarchy is brilliant. >> you leave the cinema early? >> i actually seen it. >> i actually seen it. >> okay. >> okay. >> i haven't seen it, but i imagine that's what's happening. >> i haven't seen it, but i imeyeah,:hat's what's happening. >> i haven't seen it, but i imeyeah,:hat's there; happening. >> i haven't seen it, but i imeyeah,:hat's there the ppening. >> i haven't seen it, but i imeyeah,:hat's there the reality]. >> yeah, well, there the reality is it's a rubbish film, which was overly hyped. >> fact, i it made me angry >> in fact, i it made me angry watching it. >> are you the target audience? >> are you the target audience? >> i i took along my >> i look, i took along my family. it was a totally inappropriate family film, by family. it was a totally inajway, riate family film, by family. it was a totally inajway, and family film, by family. it was a totally inajway, and it|mily film, by family. it was a totally inajway, and it didy film, by family. it was a totally inajway, and it did havei, by family. it was a totally inajway, and it did have very the way, and it did have very disturbing messaging. it definitely but definitely had funny bits, but easily the best part of it was ryan as ken . that's it. ryan gosling as ken. that's it. there's some funny writing in it. it's been nominated for a bunch of other stuff, but hello, it's just not good enough. it wasn't brilliantly directed . uh, wasn't brilliantly directed. uh, it did get nominated for best director, so it got a bunch of stuff anyway. and look, margot robbie, she's she's a great actor . she really she's been actor. she really she's been brilliant in a load of different stuff in this. she doesn't. she's a doll. i mean, there's not miss, you know,
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not she's not miss, you know, it's massively emotional. it's not massively emotional. >> a doll as though. >> ken's a doll as well though. >> ken's a doll as well though. >> but but he >> yeah, but it's but but he really he his journey is arguably greater than hers at all. >> yeah. go on. >> well the patriarchy is great. if anybody doesn't believe the patriarchy is great, wait till you find out oil rigs. you find out about oil rigs. >> so . >> but the so. >> but the so. >> and he's much more muscly than her. >> that's true in this. in the article , all these people are article, all these people are saying this, you know, this is missing point of the film, missing the point of the film, missing the point of the film, missing point feminism. missing the point of feminism. neither of those two things should if the should be saying, well, if the bloke gets a nomination, the woman has the surely, woman has to. the point, surely, is talent be. is that your talent should be. i've it . i is that your talent should be. i've it. i don't is that your talent should be. i've it . i don't know i've not seen it. i don't know what acting. no, but what the acting. no, no, no, but that's that's exactly what it. >> there's this automatic expectation that everybody just has. has be has. everybody has to be nominated. has. everybody has to be nomineyeah. sexist. yeah. >> josh >> no, the feet josh netflix is thinking streaming content thinking about streaming content live like it's televised. if only there was a name for something like that. very good. >> ah, that's my impression of a wrestler. >> uh , what would be your >> uh, what would be your wrestling name? just out of interest. uh just cold, cold bald old dirty bull joe. anyway .
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bald old dirty bull joe. anyway. that's my. >> that's my one. >> that's my one. >> yeah , yeah. >> yeah, yeah. >> yeah, yeah. >> alongside, you know, what was the iranian guy? the, um, the ayatollah . oh, yeah. ayatollah. oh, yeah. >> yeah, yeah. >> yeah, yeah. >> that's like dodgy racist. >> that's like dodgy racist. >> i'd be papa .uk. i will destroy you. this is about wrestling. >> twitter. i thought they just didn't like you, but they just giving you wrestling names. >> that's what it is. yeah. >> that's what it is. yeah. >> so netflix strikes $5 billion deal to live stream wwe raw show. this is a ten year agreement. it's going to start in next year. uh, gives them a year to sort out their technical issues because they do have issues because they do have issues actually with live streaming . uh, they're streaming. uh, and they're saying it's not about saying that it's not about moving into sport, but they're saying is kind saying that this is kind of drama in sports. this has storytelling because it's wrestling and fake. wrestling and it's fake. >> just it's all fake. >> it's just all it's all fake. >> it's just all it's all fake. >> i'm gonna have a >> but now i'm gonna have a bunch people no, it's bunch of people going, no, it's real, uh, and get angry real, uh, and get very angry about uh, is about it. but, uh, this is a clever for them. it's huge . clever move for them. it's huge. it's a huge industry. uh, this particular thing, it's got you know, millions and millions of fans. know, millions and millions of fans . and i imagine it will also
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fans. and i imagine it will also introduce a lot more fans to it. so it does there is there is a logic to this and it looks like the all the diversity and gender stuff that they were trying to push, it looks like that hasn't been so popular. >> gone back to oil >> so they've gone back to oil up some men, oil up some men. >> yeah. >> yeah. >> telegraph leo and a naked >> the telegraph leo and a naked artist is upset that he was groped and the museum didn't stop it. no one got the sack, but apparently someone did brush his, um . see how that joke works ? >> ?- >> even 7- >> even i 7_ >> even i got ? >> even i got scared. >> even i got scared. >> i couldn't work out which word. >> that's good. >> that's good. >> genitalia. there's a nude artist sues the museum of modern art for failing to stop groping visitors. that's failing to stop the visitors from groping him, not the groping the not the museum. groping the visitors . so this is john visitors. so this is john boehner , bonafide? well, i don't boehner, bonafide? well, i don't know if he is. he claimed he was hired by the museum for this, uh, exhibition where his job is to stand naked while facing a naked woman. and apparently , um, naked woman. and apparently, um, he suffered years of emotional distress because a few blokes walked along and fondled them. i
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mean , you shouldn't laugh at mean, you shouldn't laugh at sexual assault, but come on, it's a bloke. it's funny when it's a bloke. it's funny when it's a bloke. uh, and, yeah, i don't know, i just feel like if you. want to you. if you didn't want to people you in this people to fondle you in this way, a job as a naked way, don't get a job as a naked guy standing where your job is and they you, they and they walk past you, they literally you're sort literally you're literally sort of standing like a pillar. of standing there like a pillar. and really close and they walk really close because are going because a few of them are going to cop a feel. >> well, eight because >> well, it's eight because it was 18in. was only 18in. >> apart, which couldn't was only 18in. >> i apart, which couldn't was only 18in. >> i couldn't�*t, which couldn't was only 18in. >> i couldn't do nthh couldn't was only 18in. >> i couldn't do that. couldn't was only 18in. >> i couldn't do that. that'sin't do. i couldn't do that. that's why that job. why i couldn't do that job. >> because there would be a barrier. >> the they brought you in at closing time . yeah. can't get closing time. yeah. can't get through there. the express. josh and someone faces jail for asking neighbour to be quiet. so solitary confinement won't be that much of a threat . that much of a threat. >> this is, another story >> this is, uh, another story from the dubai tourist board. grandad faces jail for asking noisy neighbours to turn the loud music down. this is a new grandfather. he's 75 years old. i visited from scotland , he's in i visited from scotland, he's in the uae and new year's eve party was very loud . next door he was very loud. next door he went. there was no no one answered. he went into their
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garden and the hostess basically threw a drink. he was carrying his granddaughter. he didn't want to up his daughter, want to wake up his daughter, who and carried who was. and he carried that. and this woman a drink at who was. and he carried that. and or s woman a drink at who was. and he carried that. and or something a drink at who was. and he carried that. and or something and a drink at who was. and he carried that. and or something and screamed at him or something and screamed at him. and they do over there him. and what they do over there is they get complaint is that they get the complaint in because essentially in first, because essentially the goes, oh, whoever the judge just goes, oh, whoever did complaint that's did the complaint first, that's the person who was wronged . um, the person who was wronged. um, and now this guy is basically going to find himself in jail for possibly for wowsers or sadly , that show is nearly over. sadly, that show is nearly over. >> all we've got time >> that's all we've got time for. let's take quick look at for. let's take a quick look at wednesday's. don't care about him daily mail goes him story. the daily mail goes with in god's name . why wasn't with in god's name. why wasn't he stopped the telegraph says army chief public face call up if uk goes to war. the guardian pm pm warns of more attacks in yemen. crisis grows and the times grieving mother faces monstrous triple killer. the eye news says uk prepares for prolonged battle with yemen rebels . and the daily star rebels. and the daily star exhume pele to prove he's my dad. and those were your front
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pages. that's all we've got time for. thank to my guests. for. thank you to my guests. we'll back tomorrow at 11 we'll be back tomorrow at 11 pm. with another. if you're watching tuned watching at 5 am, stay tuned because is the way because breakfast is on the way for have a good one. for you. next, have a good one. >> looks like things are heating up boxt boiler oilers sponsors of whether you're on gb news . of whether you're on gb news. hello it's aidan mcgivern here from the met office with the gb news forecast storm. >> jocelyn sweeps through overnight increasingly windy with heavy showers for many of us, although the wettest weather carried through on tuesday , carried through on tuesday, today is now clearing to showers and some longer spells of rain in the far northwest. it is in the far northwest where the strongest of the winds will be, and for many parts of the uk we'll see wind of 50mph, we'll see wind gusts of 50mph, 65 near coasts. but for the north and west of scotland, that's where we've got an amber warning, because overnight winds will gust up to 70 or 80 miles an hour. yes, a bit more of a normal winter compared normal winter storm compared with the clear with storm isha, but the clear up operation still continues
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with storm jocelyn with asia. so storm jocelyn could lead to considerable further impacts as we start wednesday, there'll be some bright weather around. it will still be blustery. they'll still be quite a number of showers across scotland and northern ireland. however, even in between these showers there will between these showers there will be some brighter interludes. and further south we keep the sunshine many places sunshine going in many places until later in the day. a mild day to come, although perhaps not feeling so pleasant with the gusty winds continuing and into the start of thursday, rain moves up from southwest. moves up from the southwest. dull and damp day for many. we cling on to the brightness in the far northeast until lunchtime , but it's going to be lunchtime, but it's going to be well, cloudy with outbreaks of rain places once again. rain for many places once again. and then the picks up. and then the wind picks up. another day to come on another blustery day to come on friday, although plenty of sunshine around, further unsettled weather this weekend. a brighter outlook with boxt solar sponsors of weather on .
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you are very welcome. here's what's leading the news this morning. there's pressure on the prime minister. he's facing calls to resign following a scathing attack from former cabinet minister simon clarke. donald trump won in new hampshire overnight, beating rival nikki haley is a trump v biden rematch now inevitable? and storm jocelyn will continue to cause chaos with your commute this morning after another night of strong winds and heavy rains . of strong winds and heavy rains. alex deakin will have your forecast throughout the program . forecast throughout the program. >> very windy again out there this morning. storm justin will clear away through the day today and the winds will slowly be easing. bright and blustery with sunshine and a few showers. full
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