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tv   Headliners  GB News  February 7, 2024 5:00am-6:01am GMT

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>> good evening here with gp news. and our top story today is actually some breaking news to start this particular bulletin. a man has been charged with malicious communication following reports of an abusive and threatening phone call to a conservative mps london office. 46 year old james phillips has also been charged with assaulting an emergency services worker. he'll appear in court tomorrow. it follows mike friar announcing his decision to quit politics last week, as he feared for his safety . the justice for his safety. the justice minister has been the target of several death threats, as well as an attack on his as an arson attack on his finchley golders green finchley and golders green constituency that news constituency office that news just coming us in the last just coming to us in the last half hour . just coming to us in the last half hour. now the king is spending the evening on his sandringham estate in norfolk, having left london earlier today . king charles and queen camilla left buckingham palace in the royal helicopter after the king spoke with prince harry for about 45 minutes at clarence
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house, prince harry flew in from los angeles following the public announcement of his father's cancer diagnosis. it's understood prince william has no plans to meet his brother while harry is in the uk , and the king harry is in the uk, and the king personally told both his sons about his cancer diagnosis. personally told both his sons about his cancer diagnosis . and about his cancer diagnosis. and palace officials are saying the king's openness about his diagnosis with the public is aimed helping those whose aimed at helping those whose lives affected by the lives are affected by the disease . more precise details disease. more precise details emerged today about the last known movements of chemical attack suspect abdul ezedi before he went on the run, met police says azadi walked past the unilever building near blackfriars and headed towards victoria embankment in central london, a journey of about a mile on foot. a £20,000 reward is still being offered to anyone . one who has any information that leads to the fugitives arrest. azad is expected of attacking a woman with a corrosive substance, leaving her with potentially life changing
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injuries . a door that blew off injuries. a door that blew off a boeing aircraft mid—flight late last month appears to have been missing for major bolts, according to an initial report by a us safety board. the door blew off an alaska airlines plane mid—flight in the united states and was found in a residential back garden. new evidence from the report has found. key bolts were missing from the door of the boeing 737 max nine jet. they'd been removed to fix rivets that were damaged in the production process . now, new video has process. now, new video has emerged showing the moment the aristocrat constance marten was arrested after being on the run with her partner and their newborn daughter. it's been shown in court today . shown in court today. >> voice of madam, where is the child? please daddy bear, look at me . concerns him. constance at me. concerns him. constance arabella, whoever you are. all right? where's your child ? right? where's your child? >> well, in the clip, the 36 year old refused to answer police questions when they were
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trying to locate her baby last year. trying to locate her baby last year . eventually, the little year. eventually, the little girl's body was found in a supermarket bag in a shed on an allotment in east sussex. the court also heard that her partner, mark gordon asked what's the big deal? when he was asked about the baby and asked for food instead, as he was arrested, the couple charged with child cruelty and causing or allowing the death of a child , deny the manslaughter of baby victoria by gross negligence . victoria by gross negligence. and lastly, the social media company meta is to start labelling images that have been created using artificial intelligence. it means that any images posted to facebook, instagram or threads that were created using ai will automatically be flagged. the company says it's currently building the new tool, and it will be rolled out in the coming months. meta says it will reduce the ability of fraudsters to distribute deceitful content for the very latest stories, do sign
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up to the gb news alert by scanning the qr code on your screen right now, or going to gb news .com/ alerts . news .com/ alerts. >> hello and welcome to headliners. i'm simon evans and tonight i am joined by chris whitten and scott capurro, both . whitten and scott capurro, both. well hello. >> yeah very well thank you . >> yeah very well thank you. >> yeah very well thank you. >> are you well scott i'm all right. yeah i'm a little bit you're like you're bearing the brunt your elbow there. brunt of it on your elbow there. >> two hour yoga earlier >> two hour yoga class earlier today. i knees behind my today. so i my knees behind my head about 90 minutes. head for about 90 minutes. >> but long terme that will improve your long jvt. >> you'll see you'll see what happens. >> you'll see you'll see what happens . viable hopefully. yeah. happens. viable hopefully. yeah. keep alive. keep me alive. >> let's look the >> let's take a look at the front page. >> uh, the daily mail. harry >> is, uh, the daily mail. harry spends just 45 minutes with charles. >> uh, the telegraph. >> uh, the telegraph. >> harry's dad , to see father.
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>> harry's dad, to see father. the guardian nhs delays leave 600 children a week. facing mental health crisis. a picture of the king. the times harry reunited with father after diagnosis . the i post office diagnosis. the i post office built second it system behind wrongful convictions and the daily star . as ever, slightly daily star. as ever, slightly off pieced . don't flush your bog off pieced. don't flush your bog if it's raining. i'm not sure if we'll have time to cover that important story, but those were your front pages. so once again, um, the same story dominating most of the front pages . chris most of the front pages. chris gunter the mail have it? >> yes. harry spends just 45 minutes with charles and duke and william have no plans to meet at all. so he spent 45 minutes with charles. >> charles rang him to tell him the bad news. >> his cancer diagnosis and they've this meeting. they've had this meeting. >> saying it's a very >> they're saying it's a very brief meeting. >> i don't know what's a >> um, i don't know what's a what's appropriate length? what's an appropriate length? >> minutes seems to
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>> 45 minutes seems to be reasonable not. reasonable to me. it's not. doesn't snatched ? i doesn't it feel snatched? i mean, anything less than ten minutes would probably been minutes would probably have been a cursory, given flown a bit cursory, given he's flown across atlantic. a bit cursory, given he's flown acrii'm atlantic. a bit cursory, given he's flown acrii'm surprisedic. a bit cursory, given he's flown acrii'm surprised they lasted >> i'm surprised they lasted that long. actually it that long. actually i'm sure it was a bit tense. >> 45 minutes is a period in school, isn't it? quite a long talk with your maths, you know, with dad. with your dad. >> the is a signal for me, >> the bell is a signal for me, not for you. a long talk not for you. it's a long talk with your dad, though, isn't it? because be because dad sometimes can be a bit and distant. well, my bit quiet and distant. well, my dad can talk for minutes dad can talk for 46 minutes without breath, without drawing a breath, but. but cancer diagnosis? >> well, far iknow, diagnosis? >> well, far i know, it's >> well, so far as i know, it's very good. there isn't but very good. there isn't one, but they're not necessarily most they're not necessarily the most emotional they? emotional people, are they? i mean, i could imagine that mean, no, i could imagine that having behind having walked behind his mother's coffin, you know , mother's coffin, you know, they're be very they're trained to be very dignified people, aren't they? >> and it's true. >> and it's true. >> it's a business relationship also, isn't it really? >> well, it has been some >> well, it has been for some time now. been managing it time now. he's been managing it at but also at arm's length. but also i think it's, um, significant. charles was about this charles was told about this diagnosis recently having gone in, you know, with an enlarged prostate, which something you prostate, which is something you and i'm sure can
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and i, scott, i'm sure can sympathise i've my sympathise with. i've had my prostate stroked many, many times, the my point is he's times, but the my point is he's not he wasn't previously aware that he was ill. right. so it's not as if this is not a sort of sick bet kind of situation. this is him coming in to just is more him coming in to just get briefed on it, i think, isn't it, this stage . isn't it, at this stage. >> don't really know, do >> so we don't really know, do we? >> but i'm not he's not >> but i'm not saying he's not really just saying in really ill. i'm just saying in terms of how i don't know. it feels trying to present feels they're trying to present it know, it almost as if he's, you know, being rites. being read the last rites. i mean, little bit hasty mean, it's a little bit hasty with my father my uncle. with my father and my uncle. >> had prostate cancer, but >> both had prostate cancer, but it's prostate it's totally this isn't prostate cancer. >> cancen >> it's. sorry, i should clarify. went a clarify. he went in for a prostate examination they prostate examination and they did check—ups while did some other check—ups while he and something else he was there. and something else has emerged. right. of he was there. and something else has strange d. right. of he was there. and something else has strange things, ght. of he was there. and something else has strange things, gmean, of the strange things, i mean, obviously for me to obviously it's not for me to say, but one of the strange things is that they haven't as say, but one of the strange thirsaid; that they haven't as say, but one of the strange thirsaid; that kind haven't as say, but one of the strange thirsaid; that kind ofven't as say, but one of the strange thirsaid; that kind of cancers say, but one of the strange thirsaid; that kind of cancer it yet said what kind of cancer it is. >> what? h- m that is strange. >> what? oh, that is strange. >> what? oh, that is strange. >> organ? think >> what kind of organ? i think they it's prostate. they said it's not prostate. they've said it's not they've just said it's not prostate. all right. prostate. we do. all right. because that was initial because that was my initial thing. say, thing. because as you say, prostate something prostate cancer is something people for over people can live with for over ten years at least. >> it's frequently
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>> yeah. it's frequently patients this patients are told that this isn't kill you know. isn't what will kill you know. >> exactly. people with >> exactly. people die with it rather anyway, we rather than of it. anyway, we move guardian. scott move on to the guardian. scott and they have some alternative take on the health service. >> right. the nhs delay is >> oh, right. the nhs delay is leaving 600 children a week facing mental health crises. the number of children referred to emergency care in emergency mental health care in england has soared by more than 50% in three weeks. i'm sorry. in years, according to the in three years, according to the data, laying bare the impact of lengthy waiting times. >> january, mean, can >> january, i mean, you can imagine had effect, imagine it has had an effect, but would be quite significant. >> yeah, netflix hasn't been great. >> no, that's true . alexander is >> no, that's true. alexander is out now. so that well that. >> yeah. for the young gays. thank god. >> come back to that short sweet greek kisses. >> this is lockdown leftovers isn't it. yeah. >> the benefits of the >> reaping the benefits of the fabulous lockdown. >> who locked >> and the ministers who locked us now going save us us down are now going to save us by bringing new ideas about by bringing in new ideas about mental health. >> it's extraordinary the number of speak to. i had of people i speak to. i had a conversation this day about of people i speak to. i had a convweation this day about of people i speak to. i had a convwe are] this day about of people i speak to. i had a convwe are now, day about of people i speak to. i had a convwe are now, only day about of people i speak to. i had a convwe are now, only now,about of people i speak to. i had a convwe are now, only now, stillt how we are now, only now, still beginning to see the impact of lockdown and lockdown on young people. and yet don't feel that
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yet i don't feel that i encountered that many people who agreed with me time that agreed with me at the time that it an horrific and draconian it was an horrific and draconian imposition on them. >> we all agree you just >> we all agree with you just want to hear you go on about it. >> we all agree with you just wan'because you go on about it. >> we all agree with you just wan'because you know about it. >> we all agree with you just wan'because you know you»ut it. >> we all agree with you just wan'because you know you cant. >> we all agree with you just wan'because you know you can be. the because you know you can be. but is, they've been but the thing is, they've been going a health care going on about a health care support the support crisis within the nhs for a long time. yeah. and for quite a long time. yeah. and you know, was seeking health you know, i was seeking health care long ago here. and care not too long ago here. and you it very difficult . you know, it was very difficult. and i got a little bit. and then they said you've got go they said you've got to go private picked up private now. but they picked up on your accent. >> they heard it. >> i expect they heard it. >> i expect they heard it. >> and they please >> yeah. and they said, please leave >> yeah. and they said, please lea'the other thing say about >> the other thing to say about mental crisis, which is mental health crisis, which is always difficult to say because of are people of course there are some people who are genuinely having a mental crisis you mental health crisis and you don't belittle that. and don't want to belittle that. and then there are think all then there are i think we all feel, sliding. uh, you know, feel, all sliding. uh, you know, the overton window of mental health has shifted health has been shifted somewhat, hasn't it? it's gone from stigmatised and from being stigmatised and nobody dares about it to nobody dares speak about it to the first thing anyone the very first thing anyone reaches for if they're feeling. the very first thing anyone reaiyou for if they're feeling. the very first thing anyone reaiyou for if tlike re feeling. the very first thing anyone reaiyou for if tlike a feeling. the very first thing anyone reaiyou for if tlike a royal g. the very first thing anyone reaiyou for if tlike a royal family >> you sound like a royal family member being member right now. being very stoic. is eating nothing stoic. she is eating nothing that's puddles stoic. she is eating nothing th.plimsolls puddles stoic. she is eating nothing th.plimsolls won't puddles stoic. she is eating nothing th.plimsolls won't cure 3uddles stoic. she is eating nothing th.plimsolls won't cure well,as stoic. she is eating nothing th.plimsolls won't cure well, it in plimsolls won't cure well, it mentions and mentions eating disorders and people being suicidal, but
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that's, you know, even those come different levels of come at different levels of severity, don't they? >> yeah . don't. no, no. >> yeah. don't. no, no. >> absolutely. anyway as i say, i mean to belittle any one i don't mean to belittle any one of individuals, just of those individuals, just the overall have the overall statistic. we have the telegraph cressida. telegraph now cressida. >> the main story is >> okay. so the main story is harry's dash to see his father. so same story again. but we've also got dense dentists to also got dense list dentists to get £20,000 gold. >> and hello to work in nhs crisis areas and specifically it says you get 20 grand if you're prepared to move to the countryside, which i think is slightly the country's . side. slightly the country's. side. >> yeah, well, i'm from most of us would like to live. >> no. well that's what i don't know. that's interesting. well, if you were being enough, if you were being paid enough, the don't the reason most people don't live too live in the countryside too expensive the houses expensive is. well, the houses are large and agreeable , and the are large and agreeable, and the jobs aren't there support that. >> that's really pricey if you. >> that's really pricey if you. >> mean, of people have >> i mean, a lot of people have a the countryside and a vision of the countryside and it you know, lots of it isn't you know, lots of people live in pebble dashed terraced houses. exactly simon. >> bits. >> there's some lovely bits. well, it's like >> there's some lovely bits. welpretty it's like >> there's some lovely bits. welpretty and it's like >> there's some lovely bits. welpretty and beautiful, like it's pretty and beautiful, like
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the of dibley. it's the vicar of dibley. but it's also 19. if i was also got a 19. if i was councillor state side, if councillor state on the side, if i living offered a golden i was living offered a golden halo to go and live in, in wiltshire, i think devizes that would be my the thing. >> i have a friend who used to travel in a caravan from neighbourhood to neighbourhood in london, a gypsy. in london, and he'd be a gypsy. no he was sorry. he's a dentist. he might have been a gypsy. might be now, actually. but he could have thought we could have been. i thought we talked dentistry, but no. talked about dentistry, but no. i saw him one day in varne in bethnal and i asked him bethnal green, and i asked him what provided. mostly what service he provided. mostly emergency service, and he mostly people coming in with with abscesses people coming in with with abs( stuff, shoot across and stuff, would shoot across the room, said. some of them the room, he said. some of them are their mouths are so i can smell their mouths before get in the caravan. before they get in the caravan. yeah. so i 20 grand isn't enough. >> no, it's an unpleasant job. but day you're it's but on a good day you're it's still staring into. still just staring into. it's an odd compulsion to become a dentist because they have to do all the usual medical training. they options and they go, i they have options and they go, i just want to do the take my fist in someone's for the rest in someone's mouth for the rest of my life. >> i know it's having said that, i uh, is i'm just
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i had, uh, this is i'm just checking time flew checking the time i flew to aspen, about 15, nearly aspen, colorado about 15, nearly 20 years ago now for the comedy festival . festival. >> i'd never been there before. it's at about 8000ft, think. it's at about 8000ft, i think. and consequently got the and consequently got off the plane, were at plane, but were still at altitude gradually over the altitude and gradually over the next became aware that next few hours became aware that i an abscess which had never i had an abscess which had never previously felt. previously made itself felt. because you're at altitude, because when you're at altitude, the pressure fails the internal pressure fails to equalise, and you've suddenly equalise, and so you've suddenly got it became got this build up and it became agonising and i went with my travel luckily to an travel insurance. luckily to an aspen, dentist who, as aspen, colorado dentist who, as you can imagine, was like a six foot four mr universe. >> yo, dude , come on in. >> yo, dude, come on in. >> like amazing. you know, like 4 or 5. uh, at the most glamorous assistants, the most up to date. >> i mean, the olympiad of dennis. >> it was incredible. and he gave me novocain, which was the single best drug experience i've ever had. you know, just all of the muscles your chest the muscles across your chest that gradually grown tense, that have gradually grown tense, just pain. just trying to control the pain. just relax. it was amazing. i spent two the dental spent two hours in the dental chair in san francisco two weeks ago, back ago, right before i came back here, and i finally found a dentist who's british the us. dentist who's british in the us. >> they're not easy find, but >> they're not easy to find, but
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they're conservative they're very conservative and i really that. and really appreciate that. and funny like couple funny too. they're like a couple of they're digging of jokes while they're digging to about this. to do a sitcom about this. >> anyway have time for >> anyway, have we got time for one finish with the one more? let's finish with the daily what you daily star. scott, what have you got? don't flush your bog. >> for god's >> if it's raining for god's sake. uh, if will avoid huge sewage spills and a destruction of our rivers. we just stop flushing our blog when it's raining. >> but on the other hand, they have made a very plausible looking frog out of two lavatory rolls they have. it's cute, right? >> with a little tongue. i like that. i don't know what has that. i don't know what that has to with anything, anyway, to do with anything, but anyway, it's a wazzock mp. >> don't have the full story here. i the use of the word here. i love the use of the word wazzock. brilliant use of wazzock. brilliant great use of that word. so basically that word. yeah, so basically the real story is to do with the lamentable state of our rivers. >> yes. isn't it. yeah, yeah. which the daily star is trying. >> i do want to go wild swimming and go swimming some of my friends but just, friends do it, but i'm just, i'm. it's not the cold or even the between stools, as the drive between two stools, as it . i'm worried about that it were. i'm worried about that going through the motions. i mean, david williams , i think he mean, david williams, i think he
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caught something didn't he? >> oh, there was a spate of stories. >> they had to pump stomach >> they had to pump his stomach and not for the first time. right >> i he's never been the >> i think he's never been the same, some people might be same, which some people might be happy about. same, which some people might be happartbout. same, which some people might be happartbout coming rishi >> part one coming up, rishi shows that morgan the shows that piers morgan is the bigger tucker meets vlad bigger man. tucker meets vlad and victory of the tractors. and the victory of the tractors. we'll see you in a couple
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radio. >> hello . >> hello. >> hello. >> so we're back with headliners and we're digging into the papers now . chris skudder papers now. chris skudder guardian. first, just when you thought you couldn't feel more contempt for our prime minister. horrible well, she's on a bet with piers morgan . with piers morgan. >> oh, god. oh, god. >> not a betting person. rishi sunak rows back on £1,000 rwanda. >> bet . >> bet. >> bet. >> and when he initially agreed to this, i thought, oh, good on him. you know, everyone's criticising him. and i thought, well, what else could he do? >> stand for himself? >> stand up for himself? >> stand up for himself? >> well, yeah, exactly. but it was. don't he
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was. you mean you don't think he should it in the should have agreed to it in the first place? >> no, i think you're right. i think fact that he rose to think the fact that he rose to it a certain it and generated a certain amount could have amount of. he could have said, let's bet on people's desperation. >> yes, he could have said that. >> yes, he could have said that. >> equating. or is he? >> i don't really not snappy. he's also a hedge funder. so of course gambler. course he's a gambler. yeah, it's to me. he's it's weird to me. he's a politician. they all time. >> turns out that he does >> it turns out that he does have gambling. but have a history of gambling. but the he was kind of the point is, he was kind of being the people's person in the moment his best. moment or trying his best. i can't imagine being awkward and now it. yeah. now he's gone back on it. yeah. just. just for £1,000 as well. >> pathetic, isn't it? >> it's pathetic, isn't it? i mean, change to him. >> e- e are saying, oh, £1,000 >> people are saying, oh, £1,000 in the living crisis. in the cost of living crisis. yeah shouldn't have yeah yeah. he shouldn't have agreed say, oh yeah, agreed to it and say, oh yeah, because we didn't all know he had of the 19th had a bit of money in the 19th century had a bit of money in the 19th cenwhen this country >> when this country was actually a serious player on the world stage, was basically a series in the reform series of wagers in the reform club. series of wagers in the reform clu yeah, yeah, yeah, was >> yeah, yeah, yeah, that was that what decided foreign that was what decided foreign policy next head of policy and the next head of state rest it. state and all the rest of it. >> brilliant. well, that's as well as desperation of people. >> that's it. it too. people. >> absolutely. too. people. >> absolutely. yeah. >> absolutely. yeah. >> still does, doesn't it.
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>> it still does, doesn't it. >> it still does, doesn't it. >> counted small beans. >> was counted very small beans. but, don't know. i think but, um, i don't know. i think there is something odd about rishi in that's more rishi sunak in this that's more serious, kind serious, which is that kind of desperation to be liked and to be popular in the moment be sort of popular in the moment and, a serious leader should and, and a serious leader should have that have taken control of that situation, as you say. i wouldn't expect it of him. but to hang piers, to say, well, hang on, piers, you is, uh, we're you know, this is, uh, we're we're our to of we're doing our best to sort of ease pressure, blah, ease the pressure, blah, blah, blah, rather than going, yeah, all right. >> it reminds me comedy. >> it reminds me of comedy. it reminds comedy now. reminds me of live comedy now. yeah because the yeah a little bit, because the young being young comedians like rishi being young, liked. young, they want to be liked. and audience member tries and if an audience member tries to control the show, they kind of to do it. of allow them to do it. sometimes. danger. sometimes. real danger. they always compares of and always compares kind of joke and invite make invite the audience, like make them the show's them feel like it's the show's about them, is real mistake. >> that's not what you do, >> that's so not what you do, is it? god, it's real battle. it? oh god, it's a real battle. >> got to tell you, i love >> i got to tell you, i love watching it. got to struggle watching it. you got to struggle to it back. to get it back. >> this all started with, well, comedy turned therapy comedy was turned into therapy about i don't know about 20 years ago. i don't know exactly it happened, exactly when it happened, but there when every new there was a point when every new young out young comedian had to come out and immediately announce themselves were lying themselves as if they were lying on and they'd talk on a couch, and then they'd talk about touched by uncle about being touched by an uncle
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or happened that they about being touched by an uncle or to happened that they about being touched by an uncle or to have happened that they about being touched by an uncle or to have that»ened that they about being touched by an uncle or to have that»enthe hat they about being touched by an uncle or to have that»enthe show, ey had to have that in the show, actually, the award. actually, to win the award. absolutely. yeah. anyway, let's, uh, let's move on. scott he's been touched by an uncle. do first let's kill first thing we do, let's kill all uh, famous line all the lawyers. uh, famous line from henry vi by william shakespeare. again shakespeare. and it once again forced to speak forced to kemi badenoch to speak the truth. labour the unvarnished truth. labour plan, the daily mail, labour plans to expand gender equal pay laws ethnic minorities . and laws to ethnic minorities. and this will lead to a bonanza for dodgy activist lawyers. >> a senior cabinet minister warns. apparently labour wants to kind of update the race relations act of 1976, make it more relevant to today and include handicapable people , all include handicapable people, all people of all races, races we didn't know existed back in 1970. there more , the more of 1970. there more, the more of them there. we're spawning all sorts. >> so i know we have more genders. do we have more genders. do we don't have more races, genders. races, thousands of genders. >> we don't time the >> we don't have time on the show right now. show for genders right now. they're not there. we're talking about so so, um, one of about race. so so, um, one of our people, you know, our favourite people, you know, kimmy this is just our favourite people, you know, kimmto this is just our favourite people, you know, kimmto lead this is just our favourite people, you know, kimmto lead mess. just our favourite people, you know, kimmto lead mess. more going to lead to a mess. more red more lawyers getting red tape, more lawyers getting involved. this law already
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exists. illegal exists. it's already illegal to do pay for people do unequal pay for people because of their skin colour or their gender any of it, but their gender or any of it, but it's good that it puts it to the forefront. people forefront. it reminds people that wrong thing to do. that it's a wrong thing to do. >> that's true. is. i >> that's true. there is. i mean, it is a people get smug about it. it's a generally observed that that observed rule that that nine times ten, people times out of ten, when people are suggesting legislation, are suggesting new legislation, all happen is the all that needs to happen is the existing legislation needs be existing legislation needs to be updated just updated properly. well just used, you know, properly reminded. yeah yeah. but um, equally , i do find it slightly equally, i do find it slightly ironic that kemi badenoch is being activated by exactly the same thing that the previous bad enoch that was what he was upset about was the race relations bill when it first came in about, know, i think about, i don't know, i think there there tendency there is a there is a tendency to attract a sort of swarm of lawyers these things. but lawyers around these things. but of making the of course, making the making the legislation key, legislation clear is the key, isn't one to isn't it? and no one wants to hire so they can get an hire a lawyer so they can get an equal pay to the to the person at the other desk. >> people just want their pay equal >> people just want their pay equal, you know they're equal, and you know that they're going people going to find out. yeah. people always paying officers.
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right. | officers. right. n >> right. and i think if they took that information just themselves without any legal support, that's a huge problem. if and you're if you're an employer and you're caught yeah. the caught doing that. yeah. the fallout massive, fallout would be massive, wouldn't be wouldn't it? so i think you'd be pretty sort it out. pretty quick to sort it out. >> absolutely. >> absolutely. >> the problem or >> the problem either that or you employee and hire you fire the employee and hire somebody else. >> well that's true, you'd find some other reason. that's normally it? some other reason. that's nothe lly it? some other reason. that's nothe same it? some other reason. that's nothe same way it? some other reason. that's nothe same way that it? some other reason. that's nothe same way that they it? some other reason. that's nothe same way that they do ? in the same way that they do that in, in sports teams and. well in politics and in all sorts of show business, you sorts of it's show business, you just way getting just find some way of getting rid them without attracting rid of them without attracting attention to real reason. rid of them without attracting atten i on to real reason. rid of them without attracting attenion �*think real reason. rid of them without attracting atten i on �*think that reason. rid of them without attracting atten i on �*think that there n. rid of them without attracting atten i on �*think that there is a yeah i do think that there is a class um, vexatious class of, um, of vexatious lawyers simply to lawyers who simply want to thwart government plans and so on. in america, on. at the moment in america, of course, they're famously on. at the moment in america, of course, byzy're famously on. at the moment in america, of course, by george famously on. at the moment in america, of course, by george soros.iously on. at the moment in america, of course, by george soros. now, funded by george soros. now, this his latest isn't this is his latest thing, isn't it? britain, there it? in britain, there are slightly i mean , they're slightly more. i mean, they're just a gang of maverick , um, do just a gang of maverick, um, do gooders. uh , yes, they are. gooders. but, uh, yes, they are. >> but i mean , but i mean, you >> but i mean, but i mean, you know, promoting british law isn't necessarily a bad thing . isn't necessarily a bad thing. and i think also going after government officials quite, government officials is quite, is dry. kind of law. is quite dry. that kind of law. yeah.i is quite dry. that kind of law. yeah. i think american lawyers are for a bit more glamour. >> true. well they >> that's true. well they already have all the suits and
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the high rises anyway. cressida uh, on. i'm convinced uh, we move on. i'm convinced there is a cheese biscuit joke to be had here with tucker and putin on the ritz, but it needs work. so in the meantime , tucker work. so in the meantime, tucker carlson confirms unedited interview with putin. >> so he's doing it and he's released this about four minute video on tiktok , and we're going video on tiktok, and we're going to have a look at it. >> in fact, we have got a little we've got a 32nd snippet there risks to conducting an interview like this obviously. >> thought it >> so we thought about it carefully many months. carefully over many months. here's doing it. here's why we're doing it. >> first, it's our job. >> first, because it's ourjob. we're in journalism . we're in journalism. >> our duty is to inform people two years into a war that's reshaped the entire world. >> most americans are not informed . they have no real idea informed. they have no real idea what's happening in this region. >> here in russia or 600 miles away in ukraine. >> what they should know, they're paying for much of it in ways they might not fully yet perceive . perceive. >> so here he is, justifying his
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presence in moscow. um some people are a little bit concerned about it. others feel that this is an interview we've been waiting for too long. good for him, you know, and he's he's out there. >> he makes a point later on of saying that nobody's him to saying that nobody's paid him to do know, he's doing it do this. you know, he's doing it on steam. there won't be on his own steam. there won't be any it. going any cost to watch it. it's going to on ex elon said he's not to be on ex elon said he's not going to ban it. no, it's going to be out there and just to be out there and he just makes great points makes all these great points that people paying that the people who are paying for know what it for this war don't know what it is, you know, and that we've had scores interviews with scores of interviews with zelenskyy. not zelenskyy. he says they're not traditional zelenskyy. he says they're not traditioniprep sessions he fawning. prep sessions is how he describes and he describes describes them. and he describes the interviews promoting the interviews as promoting a foreign new foreign leader like he's a new consumer so he's saying consumer brand. so he's saying it's sided we need it's all one sided and we need to what's being on to hear what's being said on the other side. and that's not necessarily that he necessarily to say that he supports all. it'sjust supports putin at all. it's just that going there, that what's going on over there, you think this is you know? so i think this is really i'm looking really exciting. i'm looking forward to it. forward to seeing it. >> quite >> well, yeah, it's quite a coup, it is, um, not not coup, but it is, um, not not completely true that we don't hear because i have hear from putin because i have watched putin's speeches to his own whatever own government leaders, whatever they are, not senate they are, it's not a senate really parliament whatever
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they are, it's not a senate realljl'veiarliament whatever they are, it's not a senate really i've watched|t whatever they are, it's not a senate realljl've watched him whatever they are, it's not a senate realljl've watched him that ever it is. i've watched him that famous, uh, weird, odd to camera speech year with speech he made last year with all phones around him all those phones around him where on for about where he rambled on for about two hours. so i do what his two hours. so i do know what his well, he expects us to well, what he expects us to believe perspective be. well, what he expects us to beli i/e perspective be. well, what he expects us to beli i think perspective be. well, what he expects us to beli i think this pective be. well, what he expects us to beli i think this willive be. well, what he expects us to beli i think this will bring be. well, what he expects us to beli i think this will bring so. but i think this will bring so much attention. >> people are going to watch this bigger scale in this on a much bigger scale in america the uk. america and the uk. >> different a different >> a different a different demographic will watch it. >> you know, they're >> it's also you know, they're going to they're going doll going to they're going to doll him up little bit for american him up a little bit for american cameras. and i think there's a danger celebrity danger to that. his celebrity status expand status in russia will expand beyond borders. and i think beyond the borders. and i think the really end this the only way really to end this misery is for is for putin to concede he's he's concede that he's that he's wrong. this sort of thing wrong. but this sort of thing only promotes him, doesn't it? >> think that is how it's >> do you think that is how it's likely to end? i i think it will end with a negotiated settlement. >> i think going to settlement. >> iwith k going to settlement. >> iwith his going to settlement. >> iwith his death, going to settlement. >> iwith his death, really. to end with his death, really. i think one people going to think one of his people going to take because. because take him out because. because russia cannot continue. they can't this. you've seen can't afford this. you've seen mothers british in mothers in british press and in russian beg for the war, russian press beg for the war, to begging get their to stop begging to get their sons home and sons and their husbands home and the hasn't come to the information hasn't come to them because russia them partially because russia
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can't scored any. there's can't afford scored any. there's no information being passed because they don't. they don't have that sort of money. they certainly it's quite interesting. >> i've seen few, uh, sort of >> i've seen a few, uh, sort of longish essays recently longish form essays recently making there is making the point that there is a, a somewhat strange and incoherent support for putin on the right among people who, like his traditional values. the fact that he's standing up against trans admirals and so on as they see it, and they ignore the fact that he had an opportunity 20 years ago to completely revolutionise the russian economy, they have economy, that they have basically human capital basically enough human capital to have made a go of it in the modern world. they had even under system, you under the soviet system, you know, considerable success with the and so on. and the space age. and so on. and that's all been thrown away. and he's sort of almost he's pursuing a sort of almost like some kind of weird philosophical, um, notion of, of, of a cyclical time and, and the rising and falling of fortunes , of great powers and so fortunes, of great powers and so on, as if vendetta are being pursued. but this is tradition politics, isn't it? >> i mean, we've seen periods in the past russia 300
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the past of russia the last 300 years where, uh, leaders have risen and pulled nationalistic fervour out of their pocket and used it to benefit themselves. the problem that for me with this is also what they don't discuss is what really needs to be talked about, which is the corruption of the ukrainian government and the reason so many are favour of many ukrainians are in favour of the being there, the russians being there, because chance of because they have no chance of crawling their poverty, because they have no chance of cravwayi their poverty, because they have no chance of cravway the their poverty, because they have no chance of cravway the ukrainian r poverty, because they have no chance of cravway the ukrainian government the way the ukrainian government runs things, have to see runs things, we will have to see whether get into that. >> uh, in the meantime, scott, staying with the telegraph, proof once of he who wears proof once again of he who wears the europe , although the trousers in europe, although they are tucked into some very muddy boots. >> you know, the problem >> well, you know, the problem in the telegraph, they talk about victory europe's about the victory of europe's farmers brussels in farmers as brussels caves in on emissions and eating emissions targets and eating less ursula von der less meat. uh, ursula von der leyen, the . european commission leyen, the. european commission president, offered a concession urging eu citizens to eat less meat. she's pulled back that from their current plan. they would like emissions to be reduced by about 90% by 2040.
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they've reduced that number and that promise has gone. they've gone back on that path. the thing is , the land in europe is thing is, the land in europe is so precious. it'sjust thing is, the land in europe is so precious. it's just too expensive to farm. there and if we want grapes, we can't afford them from france. we can't afford grapes from spain. >> well, france, france is still got viable wine got a pretty viable wine industry, they don't go industry, even if they don't go industry, even if they don't go in they in wine, they can. >> but, but, but the property use and the soil needed to make wine from california is much different than simply growing grapes. you can sell in a market. and me, that market. and believe me, that bunch grapes sold in the bunch of grapes sold in the market. none could afford market. none of us could afford on the we're on of this on the salaries we're on of this station, on the salaries we're on of this statio it was, if it was not >> if it was, if it was not subsidised. mean because subsidised. you mean because i can't french wine? i do can't afford french wine? i do dnnk can't afford french wine? i do drink french. can't afford french wine? i do drink fwine. you can't. but the >> no wine. you can't. but the grapes themselves. the i'm grapes themselves. the what i'm saying is great is like saying is great grapes, is like buying saying is great grapes, is like buy but i'm saying produce, but but i'm saying produce, vegetables, food that we have on our cannot afford if our table. we cannot afford if it's grown in europe. it's only grown in europe. >> to honest, the >> i think to be honest, the european farms should now be essentially in order to essentially run in order to attract tourists. they i thought theyi attract tourists. they i thought they i thought they were seriously , they should make the
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seriously, they should make the country as attractive as they are in california. >> mean, wineries exist >> i mean, those wineries exist not the wine they not because of the wine they produce, because of the visitors. absolutely. produce, because of the visitors. all absolutely. produce, because of the visitors. all turned absolutely. produce, because of the visitors. all turned them utely. they've all turned them into spas. time. spas. and we go all the time. they're fantastic. they're they're it's they're a bit pricey, and it's they're a bit pricey, and it's the only they can afford the only way they can afford to have that soil and turn it every six months to, you know, big real proposition. real estate proposition. >> way, the sussex downs >> by the way, the sussex downs has, of >> by the way, the sussex downs has, of , um, has, uh, many acres of, um, potential vineyard with the soil and the climate are almost exactly what they were in champagne . champagne. >> i was given some, some engush >> i was given some, some english wine by my friend lauren in the last couple of years. yeah. >> how was it getting huge. yeah, it was sparkling wine, folks. here first. folks. you heard it here first. buy vineyard . that's part folks. you heard it here first. buy done.ineyard . that's part folks. you heard it here first. buy done. coming that's part folks. you heard it here first. buy done. coming up,3t's part folks. you heard it here first. buy done. coming up, the part folks. you heard it here first. buy done. coming up, the french two. done. coming up, the french have a decent mojo . oliver have a decent mojo. oliver laurence as discovered hers for jacob rees—mogg . we'll see you jacob rees—mogg. we'll see you in a couple
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radio. >> welcome back to headliners we're in the second half now, and scott , the telegraph, as
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and scott, the telegraph, as even and scott, the telegraph, as ever, the stories that tell us the truth about the times we live in are not necessarily events per se, but rather they're unrwa. france. >> the, um , uh, young people are >> the, um, uh, young people are having less sex than about 16 years ago, 28% of 18 to 24 year olds, uh, who have already slept with someone. so they're not virgins . they are having less virgins. they are having less sexual intercourse in a year than they were in 2006. >> quite a lot less. right. >> quite a lot less. right. >> well, it seems as though. yeah, of course, 50 to 59 year olds are having less sex than they 2006, but that's they were in 2006, but that's because they're in their 50s now. how. >> now. >> well, i mean, i suppose it's looking the same demographic looking at the same demographic as slide let's as they slide through. let's hope know, some hope i don't know, but some of the nines, the more the 50 to 50 nines, they're up from 10, they're up from, from 10, they're up from, from 10, they're a little bit. they're up a little bit. >> so that's oh up considerably. >> so that's oh up considerably. >> right. yeah. >> so that's oh up considerably. >> killingright. yeah. >> so that's oh up considerably. >> killing it.1t. yeah. >> so that's oh up considerably. >> killing it. go yeah. >> so that's oh up considerably. >> killing it. go for1. >> so that's oh up considerably. >> killing it. go for the 50 to 59 year old. >> yeah. you're right i read that wrong too. >> had history of being sexy. >> had a history of being sexy. remain but the new the remain sexy. but the new the
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new. >> they're getting i think >> they're getting sexy i think i blocked it because that's kind of i was of my age group. and i was nervous about it. >> but it is worrying, isn't it, that, um. well, i mean, all that, um. well, i mean, it's all part picture. part of a bigger picture. obviously have a fertility obviously we have a fertility crisis and that's creating all kinds of economic and demographic problems. but there is a general sort of is also just a general sort of sense of apathy as well, which i think strikes adults think is strikes a lot of adults just conversationally, anecdotally, i just hear a really by not really dangerous, though by not producing semen regularly . producing semen regularly. >> this the semen count in that person and its effectiveness decrease can go down as well. >> that's very interesting. so the t levels we keep hearing it's all dropping. no one's interested. >> everyone's austrian levels are the thing. are down. this is the thing. this underlying factor. this is the underlying factor. and people don't this is the underlying factor. and that people don't this is the underlying factor. and that because people don't this is the underlying factor. and that because it people don't this is the underlying factor. and that because it makese don't this is the underlying factor. and that because it makes ition't like that because it makes it sound decide one way sound like men decide one way or the other, know, and i have the other, you know, and i have seen of heterosexual male, seen a lot of heterosexual male, though, with, with like shopping sacks to co—ops on the weekends. >> yeah, yeah, yeah, i've seen a lot of that. it's very much a turn very, very much a turn off. >> it is basically only gay men now who sufficient levels now who have sufficient levels of testosterone. >> fighting the battle of testosterone. >> the fighting the battle of testosterone. >> the front ighting the battle of testosterone. >> the front lines; the battle of testosterone. >> the front lines. we're)attle of testosterone. >> the front lines. we're doing on the front lines. we're doing all the work as you maintain a
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masculine profile, and i'll see you later. >> use remember went >> but we use i remember i went on exchange on my first french exchange trip. i was 14, and there were so many rumours flying about that just that the sex were just permanent. french were permanent. the french freud were just at this was just permanently at it. this was supposed the expectation. supposed to be the expectation. we them a bit disappointed we found them a bit disappointed by projecting what do you of projecting that. what do you think is that possible? >> french exchange >> i think french exchange trips were you were very exciting before you went on them. yeah, went on. and they excited. they weren't quite as excited. >> yeah, i know i used to >> yeah, i know when i used to go to paris on a single, it was pretty wild old. yeah. i'm from san and that scene san francisco and that scene kind intimidated me. i got kind of intimidated me. i got used quite quickly, used to it quite quickly, though. was lot used to it quite quickly, thougion. was lot used to it quite quickly, thougion. but was lot used to it quite quickly, thougion. but thiswas lot used to it quite quickly, thougion. but this is s lot used to it quite quickly, thougion. but this is again, going on. but this is again, this is in the around then around somebody around 2006, somebody should do around 2006, somebody should do a guess of a separate survey, i guess of the community and whether the lgbt community and whether their levels also two their levels are also the two lgbtq+ yeah triple a i lgbtq+ aiden. yeah triple a i bet it's similar though, because everyone's on their phone battery gb news daily mail battery size gb news daily mail now . how. >> now. >> cressida. they say good >> cressida. they do say good fences good neighbours, so fences make good neighbours, so perhaps no surprise at holly valance's evolution in those terms. very nice. thank you. >> holly valance burst out a surprise tory poster girl x neighbours star swipes at crap
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lefties and climate alarmists and shock appearance at launch of new popcorn group as she wants and she wants jacob rees—mogg as pm. so yeah, she's appeared today at popcorn. it's this new popular conservatism group dubbed popcorns. it's been formed by allies of ex pm liz truss. so it's the new we have the clip. >> let's have a look at her. everyone starts off as a lefty and then wakes up at some point after you start either making money working, trying to run a business, trying to buy a home, and then realise what crap ideas they all are and then you go to they all are and then you go to the right. so there she is. that's her evolution. she's been trying to run a business and run a family. i don't know what those. >> well, she's got a big business to run, hasn't she? her husband has. >> um. what is her husband? he's a property, uh, interior designer. >> property developer. of >> property developer. one of the right? oh, really? >> property developer. one of the okay,’ oh, really? >> property developer. one of the okay,’ oh, realsuper wealthy . >> okay, so she's super wealthy. >> yeah, yeah. >> yeah, yeah. >> would make her concern >> which would make her concern number park. number one, hyde park. >> i remember them. so why she. >> i remember them. so why she. >> be struggling >> she pretends to be struggling in little but in that little speech, but we
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know not. she's not. know she's not. yeah she's not. she right. she she just likes the right. she likes chikerema. >> she's saying she's struggling. she's saying struggling. i think she's saying i'm one of the wealth i'm now i'm one of the wealth generators opposed the. generators as opposed to the. >> says something about >> but she says something about you to a you try to you try to build a business. try a house business. you try to buy a house and realise how crap and you realise how crap the left policies are. so you left their policies are. so you go to the right. it's a pretty you've the business and the you've got the business and the house, i mean, house, uh, kind of, i mean, i think some to the think there is some truth to the fact know, people fact that, you know, people assume wealth can just be redistributed. >> and then when they try and make some of their it's make some of their own and it's redistributed them, it redistributed away from them, it does their view does tend to change their view problem it's problem for them. yeah. but it's her it's pretty shallow. >> liz truss free balded at that event, by the way. yeah, she did one um, off the cuff speeches. >> was it good? haven't >> was it good? i haven't watched was just talking. i >> um, she was just talking. i think she she hit out at. she's farage, know, she's farage, you know, she's like. yeah. think she said, yeah. and then i think she said, it's great. all of us working it's so great. all of us working together part of together and being a part of something whatever. something bigger and whatever. >> greatest prime >> she's the greatest prime minister this country. never minister of this country. never had. less had. as far as i'm so less popular violence on popular than air violence on board, a bit of, uh, board, giving it a bit of, uh, you cannot wrong having you cannot go wrong with having attractive, you know, young, young side. young women on your side.
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>> she's it go a little bit. it's >> yeah, but she's pretty good by conservative yeah. by conservative sanders. yeah. >> 40. she's pretty >> she's only 40. she's pretty hot was 20. hot when she was 20. >> no. liz truss. >> no. liz truss. >> no. liz truss. >> no that's. >> no that's. >> yeah. telegraph now scott the latest women latest version of women hit hardest loans. >> oh god. more about female graduates. god can you call your friends? i was going to be the one to say, god, more about one to say, oh, god, more about how difficult it is for a girl to education look to get an education look apparent . girls get when they've apparent. girls get when they've got a new payback plan for student loans . that's called student loans. that's called plan five. it starts sooner at a lower grade of payment and obviously goes longer to pay it off because it starts now. when you make 25,000 a year, instead of plus and apparently girls of 27 plus and apparently girls get lesser paid lower income jobs and boys do . so boys are jobs and boys do. so boys are going to have have, uh, an easier time paying back their loan. i mean, they save money because they'll pay it back quicker. >> that's true. but the main, the main thing that has been identified is the time that women take off to have babies. that's the main thing. the so—called gap. so—called gender pay gap. >> gun to >> no one's putting a gun to their a baby.
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their head or a baby. >> exactly. well, this is the thing. nothing. not thing. there's nothing. i'm not saying that doesn't have saying that that it doesn't have a but not a sexist result, but it's not because somebody and because somebody sat down and went, ha we'll make went, ha ha ha! we'll make the women actually, if went, ha ha ha! we'll make the wonwant actually, if went, ha ha ha! we'll make the wonwant to actually, if went, ha ha ha! we'll make the wonwant to know actually, if went, ha ha ha! we'll make the wonwant to know you've], if went, ha ha ha! we'll make the wonwant to know you've got you want to know why, you've got to under the hood. there's to look under the hood. there's loads of stuff like this. warren farrell's book farrell's written a whole book about so—called gender pay about the so—called gender pay gap, and it's really complicated. but the main thing is and is women like having babies, and they can and men can't. >> career breaks >> and having career breaks generally, and also , you know, generally, and also, you know, it's ironic that the it's slightly ironic that the subject women tend subject matter that women tend to take tend to be the thing. i mean, my daughter is doing engush mean, my daughter is doing english and film studies at the moment. her. moment. good luck to her. >> no money in of that. >> but exactly, it's a hobby. you know, there's in you know, there's no point in arguing sweet it. but, you arguing sweet about it. but, you know, and nobody stopping arguing sweet about it. but, you knovtakingnobody stopping arguing sweet about it. but, you knovtaking no ody stopping arguing sweet about it. but, you knovtaking no excusestopping arguing sweet about it. but, you knovtaking no excuse studies. her, taking no excuse studies. and like, could do and i was like, you could do economic. and then maybe there'd and i was like, you could do econyjob:. and then maybe there'd and i was like, you could do econyjob waiting�*nen maybe there'd and i was like, you could do econyjob waiting for maybe there'd and i was like, you could do econyjob waiting for youybe there'd and i was like, you could do econyjob waiting for you at there'd and i was like, you could do econyjob waiting for you at the re'd be a job waiting for you at the other you know, no, other end, but, you know, no, don't want to. >> there you go. >> so there you go. >> so there you go. >> i'll be paying bloody >> so i'll be paying that bloody loan anyway, i imagine. anyway, >> so i'll be paying that bloody loan arnews i imagine. anyway, >> so i'll be paying that bloody loan arnews i ithejine. anyway, >> so i'll be paying that bloody loan ar news i ithe metro nyway, >> so i'll be paying that bloody loan ar news i ithe metro now, y, netflix news in the metro now, cressida and new drama cressida and a new docu drama has the great has rekindled one of the great impenetrably ancient impenetrably of the ancient world, speak. yes exactly. world, so to speak. yes exactly. >> wasn't that impenetrable? people netflix people really think netflix turned alexander the great gay,
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apparently in their outraged . so apparently in their outraged. so there's a new netflix there's a new a new netflix thing out about alexander. uh the great. why wouldn't there be? he was great. of be? he was great. lots of action. by the age of 30, he'd created one of the largest empires in history, which does sound very problematic , doesn't sound very problematic, doesn't it? but well done. >> it wasn't much those >> it wasn't so much in those days. much very celebrated. >> not so much very celebrated. and apparently in this he kisses a man he's banging a couple of his generals. >> hot. >> it's hot. >> it's hot. >> of people are arguing >> a lot of people are arguing on they on the internet saying, but they were gay then, were all a bit gay then, a little bit the greeks created it, mixed and matched. >> and matched. the >> yeah, mixed and matched. the thing this thing is, there is this conversation always. >> slot into >> it's not it doesn't slot into our preconceived categories gay, straight, bisexual does straight, whatever bisexual does it very different sort of nofions it very different sort of notions before christianity, it very different sort of notionsdidn'tzore christianity, it very different sort of notions didn't really ristianity, it very different sort of notions didn't really ristiar about people didn't really think about it that much. >> you know, if they wanted >> no. you know, if they wanted to, a baby. if they to, they'd have a baby. if they want they'd want to bang a general, they'd bang a general. whatever there is, there is some some is, there is some reason, some evidence alexander evidence to think that alexander was meaningful relationship. >> the his life in that >> the love of his life in that regard man as regard was with a young man as well. remember his name. well. i can't remember his name. i always want to say bucephalus, but horse i think it
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but that was a horse i think it wasn't. but that was a horse i think it wasum. right. i circled it >> um. it's right. i circled it because i looked up and because i looked him up and they're both. they're both lovely actually. lovely looking men, actually. >> yeah, that's anyway. >> yeah, that's him anyway. well, have declare >> yeah, that's him anyway. weinterest. have declare >> yeah, that's him anyway. weinterest.myiave declare >> yeah, that's him anyway. weinterest. my sister declare >> yeah, that's him anyway. weinterest. my sister d> streaming netflix. if you i can't say it's streaming. >> s'toaming netflix. if you i can't say it's streaming. >> s'to watch netflix. if you i can't say it's streaming. >> s'to watch it. netflix. if you i can't say it's streaming. >> s'to watch it. so tflix. if you i can't say it's streaming. >> s'to watch it. so it's. if you i can't say it's streaming. >> s'to watch it. so it's called| want to watch it. so it's called the making of a gay god or just the making of a gay god orjust a god. i gay, i had a gay. a god. i added gay, i had a gay. i'm aidan magee he wept like eric were eric bristow, for there were no new conquer. new worlds to conquer. >> one of the most sinister and unsettling cases of the century comes unsatisfactory comes to a most unsatisfactory conclusion, and the daily mail's coverage does include the phrase the case was reopened in 2011. um apparently. >> daily mail gareth williams we all remember him, uh, years back. he was found in a stuffed into a piece of luggage, placed into a piece of luggage, placed into his own bathtub in his pimlico flat , and his hands were pimlico flat, and his hands were publicly and were politely folded across his chest. yes, uh, he was locked in there from the in from the outside . so
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the in from the outside. so obviously other people were involved . involved. >> well, you would think so. but they claimed it was a sort of contortionist act. right. well, they're key in they're saying the key was in with there's under with him, but there's no under his right buttock. >> but. >> but. >> exactly. em“ >> yeah, exactly. prints anyway, fingerprints on the bath of anybody's think. anybody's i think. >> so that's. they think it might be, uh, either mi6 might be, uh, either m16 or american, wanted american, uh, people who wanted to he knew to end his life because he knew too . but the rules he too much or. but the rules he complained about his zipper. >> involved in and complained about his zipper. >> this involved in and complained about his zipper. >> this stuff. volved in and complained about his zipper. >> this stuff. so led in and complained about his zipper. >> this stuff. so was n and complained about his zipper. >> this stuff. so was he and all this stuff. so was he a little bit documentary about him making a bit of a nested suitcase? >> yeah, they made him gay. >> yeah, they made him gay. >> i mean, i think there is an extraordinary novel waiting to be written about this, isn't there? it a kind of there? we make it a kind of finding he's involved the finding he's involved in the drag scenes , the drag. >> and are those scenes together 7 >> and are those scenes together ? does have to get ? so does everyone have to get along once along a range of hobbies, once again, lumping all of more again, lumping all of these more letters added that thing. jeez. >> good lord, that's part >> good lord, that's it for part three. and no disrespect three. and uh, no disrespect meant towards poor family meant towards his poor family coming up in the final section, honesty is the best policy, especially it comes to your especially when it comes to your talentless wearing talentless offspring and wearing slippers to the chippy is now
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chic. see you in a
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welcome back to headliners for the final section. sometimes a little quirky cressida . little quirky cressida. something that creates a lot of dispute in our household, i can tell you, is lying to your kids a good way to improve their self—esteem or damn them to a lifetime of dishonesty the lifetime of dishonesty in the daily mail. lifetime of dishonesty in the dai i'd/iail. lifetime of dishonesty in the dai i'd to l. lifetime of dishonesty in the dai i'd to love know which side >> i'd to love know which side you're uh, honesty you're on. simon. uh, honesty really policy. lying really is the best policy. lying to children that they did to your children that they did well a school well during a school play can turn into later in turn them into liars. later in life, finds. so this life, study finds. so this divides up, lies into , uh, divides up, lies into, uh, instrumental lies and white lies. and the instrumental ones are. if you don't stop doing that, i'll call the police . it's that, i'll call the police. it's lying, it might work. that, i'll call the police. it's lying, it might work . and lying, but it might work. and then white lies are that. honey? you agree? >> weren't lying as to >> when you weren't lying as to your intention, i'm your intention, then i'm not saying it's not a problematic, but regard it as a lie, but i don't regard it as a lie, i regard it. i regard a threat that you will not follow through on a different category to a
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on as a different category to a lie, as to facts that you have at disposal and are at your disposal and are choosing misrepre . that's choosing to misrepre. that's that's difference , that's a significant difference, wouldn't you say? >> you like a parent >> uh, you sound like a parent who's justifying your behaviour . who's justifying your behaviour. >> i don't know, i mean, you know such things. >> i know not what they are. >> i know not what they are. >> whatever you have to do to tell to shut up, i'm all tell a kid to shut up, i'm all for it. it's just to quiet them down in a market or on an airline. >> so that's a short time solution, is what they're saying here is you could end up later on a child who's on with a larger child who's a person . person. >> oh, so you're saying, for instance, if are instance, if you if you are quiet i will reward you quiet now, i will reward you when we get home. >> yeah. like a dog with snacks. look well—behaved they are. look how well—behaved they are. if them snacks, give if you give them snacks, give the snack. you know, the kid a snack. you know, there's one interesting study the kid a snack. you know, there'sis ne interesting study the kid a snack. you know, there'sis alwaysresting study the kid a snack. you know, there'sis always bandied:udy the kid a snack. you know, there'sis always bandied around which is always bandied around and is constantly being re—examined. >> marshmallow >> was the marshmallow test. you remember test for any viewers marshmallow test for any viewers who familiar was who are not familiar with it was was, um, decades ago , small was, um, decades ago, small children were left in a room with one marshmallow. were with one marshmallow. they were told resist told that if they could resist eating 15 minutes while eating it for 15 minutes while they observed, they'd they were not observed, they'd come they get two
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come back in and they get two marshmallows. they wanted marshmallows. but if they wanted to just eat the one and then they them the rest to just eat the one and then th> ye times. ey've repeated this , like, sinister. >> yetimes. it'se repeated this , like, sinister. >> ye times. it's an peated this , like, sinister. >> yetimes. it's an old :ed this , like, sinister. >> yetimes. it's an old studys , like, sinister. >> yetimes. it's an old study , many times. it's an old study, but it's been done. >> here's the key. yes, >> but here's the key. so yes, the ability delay the ability to delay gratification and low time preference, whatever you want to call predicts outcomes call it, predicts life outcomes is hugely, very accurate. if the more able you are to resist eating the marshmallow, the more you're able to invest and hold your marriage together and all the of it. but it turns out the rest of it. but it turns out that the kids who were less able to do that were the ones who had been on many been lied to on too many occasions yeah, occasions beforehand. yeah, yeah, ones who had grown up yeah, the ones who had grown up in families where they were told, if you're good, you'll get this. and then they didn't get this, or they had like absentee fathers kind fathers who were just kind of 9°, fathers who were just kind of go, i'll at the weekend. go, i'll see you at the weekend. and you them your and then you see them or your father says, when i get when i get the new car, get to the new company car, we'll go disneyland and never we'll go to disneyland and never happened, had jam happened, never had jam tomorrow, jam tomorrow. and after go jam , after a while you just go jam, jam tomorrow. i'm going to take after a while you just go jam, jamjam|orrow. i'm going to take after a while you just go jam, jamjam|orrow.it's| going to take after a while you just go jam, jamjam|orrow.it's onying to take after a while you just go jam, jamjam|orrow.it's on the to take after a while you just go jam, jamjam|orrow.it's on the plate.e the jam when it's on the plate in front so that is a
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in front of me so that is a significant part of lying as well. personally that well. i personally think that lying is one of the great slippery slopes in, uh, you know, you're a comedian. >> we lie all the time. no, you don't lie. you present the truth with wink . with a wink. >> but it is very easy. you start off just by going, i just don't want to see my family this weekend. my, you know, my. i just can't face the driver. i'm sorry, ma'am, i've got a bit of a cold. i think it's best i don't come because i'll only give it to you. and before you know you know you're, um. know it, you know you're, um. but i do admire people from interpol who can, like. >> lie, and i'm >> cause i can't lie, and i'm terrified of it, because then i think to trip myself terrified of it, because then i thinit's to trip myself terrified of it, because then i thinit's going to trip myself terrified of it, because then i thinit's going to to trip myself terrified of it, because then i thinit's going to getip myself terrified of it, because then i thinit's going to get biggerzlf terrified of it, because then i thinit's going to get bigger and up. it's going to get bigger and bigger. so i lie. and up. it's going to get bigger and bseer. so i lie. and up. it's going to get bigger and bsee other so i lie. and up. it's going to get bigger and bsee other people lie. and up. it's going to get bigger and bsee other people doing. and up. it's going to get bigger and bsee other people doing itknd up. it's going to get bigger and bsee other people doing it with i see other people doing it with great success. >> husband incapable >> yeah, my husband is incapable of yeah, yeah, but my of it. yeah, yeah, yeah, but my husband's evangelical and incapable of lying. and sometimes lie a sometimes i wish he would lie a little yeah, and not say little bit. yeah, and not say things like, no, it's things to me like, no, no, it's fine . yeah. no. yeah yeah yeah. fine. yeah. no. yeah yeah yeah. just say that. that's all i want to hear. scott >> story of to hear. scott >> the strange story of mr pan now the light it shines on now in the light it shines on
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conventional beauty standards that have had to that you and i have had to battle whole lives. battle our whole lives. >> gareth. chino. >> um, gareth. carolina chino. she's and she . she won the, she's 26, and she. she won the, um . well, she's born she was . um. well, she's born she was. she was not born. she's born in ukraine. yeah. and moved to japan pretty young, very young . japan pretty young, very young. and felt all her life like she was kind of , and felt all her life like she was kind of, um, treated as a foreign person or something unusual or weird. she tried to fit in and then she won the miss nippon contest at, um. and she was thrilled to do it. it's a 55 year old contest that she was really excited to get that title, and so excited that she had sex with a married man . and had sex with a married man. and the thing is, in japan, if you do that, the mistress gets blamed and in fact, the wife in the threesome can sue the mistress for ending her marriage i >> -- >> and you think that's what's caused this ? because i think caused this? because i think there was also there was disquiet. maybe it wasn't all sort of, uh, she's ukranian, but she's ukrainian because they are
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still very much more ethnically self—defined japanese, self—defined. the japanese, she's white person to she's the first white person to ever a miss great ever win. now a miss great britain anyone would have britain who anyone would have any any nationality any issue with any nationality or ethnicity or, you know, well , or ethnicity or, you know, well, if if she wasn't of european if she if she wasn't of european descent, wouldn't to descent, she wouldn't have to keep i'm english, i'm english. >> we okay. all right. yeah. >> we go. okay. all right. yeah. >> we go. okay. all right. yeah. >> you're english. yeah, yeah. >> you're english. yeah, yeah. >> over there. >> but are. there. » but >> but they are. it's interesting. also interesting. there's also a degree doubt there which interesting. there's also a dequite doubt there which interesting. there's also a dequite touching. there which interesting. there's also a dequite touching. one re which interesting. there's also a dequite touching. one of which interesting. there's also a dequite touching. one of the :h is quite touching. one of the commentators in a japanese newspaper said that, um, while no one should face racial discrimination if we adopt these western standards of beauty, then no japanese woman is going to be able to compete, which i think is terribly sad sort of mindset. it's true, though, isn't it? >> the picture of the woman she's these enormous eyes she's got these enormous eyes and she looks like me, she and she looks like to me, she reminds of japanese reminds me of japanese anime because cute reminds me of japanese anime becawith cute reminds me of japanese anime becawith big cute reminds me of japanese anime becawith big eyes. cute face with big eyes. >> i think they're also worried about adopting western, especially western europe, uh, mores. well, yeah. and they don't family to be in don't want the family to be in any way discredited. no it's a very tension. very interesting tension. >> should observe >> we should observe it. cressida, we have more cressida, we have one more story. staying the shifting story. staying with the shifting sands and beauty and
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sands of fashion and beauty and slippers and wearing them to the chippy, them wherever chippy, wearing them wherever you like, wearing your slippers outside is now acceptable. >> fashionable. no, hate >> and fashionable. no, i hate this. um, apparently justin bieber's been doing it great. lots of celebrities. it's been featured at london at fashion week in paris , and this is now week in paris, and this is now there's a picture of rishi sunak's wife going to the shops in slippers. >> i hate them slippers and i hate sliders as well. >> oh, oh, i have of those. >> but in the house it's fine. >> but in the house it's fine. >> they're good for poolside too. don't fall at poolside too. you don't fall at poolside is what they're actually made for. >> or going from hotel room for. >>yourjoing from hotel room for. >>your en|g from hotel room for. >>your en suite] hotel room for. >>your en suite. my hotel room for. >>your en suite. my rule, tel room for. >>your en suite. my rule, which m to your en suite. my rule, which my adopted and has my son has adopted and has remembered, is you should never wear anything public. you wear anything in public. you couldn't a football back to couldn't kick a football back to its owner. >> e nice. >> all right, nice. >> all right, nice. >> well , i can't tell when >> yeah, well, i can't tell when i see kids walking through shoreditch they've woken shoreditch if they've just woken up or left a yoga class, up or just left a yoga class, but they're. up or just left a yoga class, but they're. the slippers >> they're wearing the slippers and the trousers and the and the pyjama trousers and the whole thing, and they have no intention . you can tell of intention. you can tell of emerging in anything other than they're sleeping or making any kind of a go. there's no effort,
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no , no comb in the hair from home. >> it's active wear for not being active. >> i guess it's kind of maybe it's sexy. maybe it'll it's kind of sexy. maybe it'll kick up the sex. >> french should start >> maybe the french should start wearing it's making wearing making. it's making holly the conservative. >> but you look available at all times to go, folks. >> the show is nearly over. let's take another quick look at wednesday's front pages. the daily spends just 45 daily mail harry spends just 45 minutes with charles. the telegraph harry's dash to see father . the telegraph harry's dash to see father. the guardian nhs delays leave 600 children a week facing mental health crisis. the times has reunited with father after diagnosed ipsis. the i post office built second it system behind wrongful convictions and the daily star. behind wrongful convictions and the daily star . don't flush your the daily star. don't flush your bog if it's raining. those were your front pages . that's all we your front pages. that's all we have time for. thank you to my guests, chris interwetten and scott capurro. we are back tomorrow at 11 pm. when andrew doyle doyle will joined by tomorrow at 11 pm. when andrew doyl
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solar sponsors of weather on . gb news. >> good evening. welcome to your latest weather update from the met office for gb news. i'm alex deakin . tonight some snowy deakin. tonight some snowy weather across northern scotland and some rain across the south that will slowly be clearing by dawn . from this weather front dawn. from this weather front that's pushing its way steadily southwards with a set of weather fronts really. and it's introducing the colder air further north. it's been very windy and across shetland windy and snowy across shetland today, the snow showers easing the winds easing but then more sleet and snow comes in across the highlands and the western isles through the night could turn pretty icy as turn things pretty icy here as well. further south it'll be rain that sinks its way across south and southern england south wales and southern england , keeping temperatures up , keeping the temperatures up here. we'll still be a here. but we'll still be a colder night than last night, certainly colder further north, with extensive frost with a fairly extensive frost from northern northwards from northern england northwards . could be icy. it . that's why it could be icy. it could be a few flurries through
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the belt, but band could be a few flurries through th
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a swift exit from the king after a 45 minute meeting with prince harry. so is a royal reconciliation even still possible ? possible? >> the government's biggest white elephant, hs2, is set to haunt the prime minister again today. >> yes, i'm catherine is political correspondent here in westminster. if the prime minister thought that stopping hs2 at birmingham was going to be the end of his hs2 headaches, he was very much mistaken . be the end of his hs2 headaches, he was very much mistaken. i'll bnng he was very much mistaken. i'll bring you the details shortly . bring you the details shortly. >> heavy snow for many parts of the country as temperatures set to drop over the next couple of days. >> a chilly but bright day for many of us today, before some
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significant snow across the

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