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tv   Breakfast with Stephen and Anne  GB News  March 10, 2024 6:00am-9:31am GMT

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crowds gather in london, palestine . palestine. >> huge crowds gather in london as pro—palestinian protests take to the streets again, but discrepant in the way these marches are being policed is causing controversy. >> princess diana's brother, charles spencer, claims he was sexually abused from the age of ii at sexually abused from the age of 11 at boarding school .
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11 at boarding school. >> the us election begins in earnest as a biden v trump rematch kicks into gear today, with both campaigning in georgia i >> hollywood's night of nights it's the oscars all stars from hollywood will gather to celebrate the best in film. we'll be looking ahead to the likely big winners, and it's mother's day, of course, so do get in touch and tell us how you are celebrating today, or how you are expecting to be celebrated . celebrated. >> maybe. >> maybe. >> good morning. it was a thrilling day of upsets upsets in the six nations, with england dramatically beating ireland at twickenham while scotland were stunned by italy in rome in the premier league, the title race is hotting up. it's liverpool against manchester city from anfield this afternoon . anfield this afternoon. >> hello there. good morning. it is a cloudy, damp start for many of us. first thing, will it improve at all.7 will of us. first thing, will it improve at all? will there be some sunshine? find out all the weather details coming up soon. >> well it's lovely to be with you today. >> i'm anne diamond and i'm
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ellie costello, and this is breakfast on gb news. well, happy mother's day, anne. >> thank you very much. >> thank you very much. >> very happy. mother's day to you. yeah, we're having a lovely day so far. >> well , day so far. >> well, yeah, day so far. >> well , yeah, well, day so far. >> well, yeah, well, is >> well, yeah, well, it is early, isn't it? >> is early, yes. >> it is early, yes. >> and i doubt any of my sons are up yet, but no doubt actually, have i any actually, have i had any messages from, have you had messages from, say, have you had any messages? i think my any lovely messages? i think my whatsapp going ding whatsapp has been going ding a couple times, so maybe some couple of times, so maybe some of them are but we are doing of them are up. but we are doing a later. of them are up. but we are doing a are later. of them are up. but we are doing a are your. of them are up. but we are doing a are you are they taking you out? >> we don't know whether we're going out or staying in yet. it's a surprise. >> well, i hope they're cooking for you. well. >> well, i hope they're cooking for oh . well. >> well, i hope they're cooking for oh no,ell. >> well, i hope they're cooking for oh no, i'm not expected to >> oh no, i'm not expected to cook. in i cook. good. yeah in fact, i don't think like my cooking don't think they like my cooking that anyway, so they all that much anyway, so they all think they're cooks than me. >> oh, that would be lovely. >> oh, that would be lovely. >> no, will be. >> no, it will be. >> no, it will be. >> it'll be all of them coming over. >> oven >> yes, yes. »- >> yes, yes. >> well, that. isn't that a treat to have all together.
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treat to have them all together. how do you get them all how often do you get them all together now. >> less and less often. >> oh, less and less often. >> oh, less and less often. >> do. we do we do >> but we do. do we do we do important and important days. yeah. and then when we haven't met when we realise we haven't met up while, then that's just up for a while, then that's just an as well. oh, an excuse for it as well. oh, they like eating in they all like eating in restaurants, that makes restaurants, so that makes it quite too. quite nice too. >> it nice and easy >> that makes it nice and easy when all get together. when you all get together. >> you what, mother's >> tell you what, mother's day is day well. is a difficult day as well. i think who think for some people who are not who want not mothers and who maybe want to there just to have been there was just a lovely piece the telegraph lovely piece in the telegraph today. just reading it today. i was just reading it a minute that for women who minute ago, that for women who got mutual got together over their mutual loss kept loss of babies, they kept miscarrying so on miscarrying each of them. so on mothers used to go mothers day, they used to go out for lunch together and for a girlie lunch together and just friendship . just celebrate their friendship. but they persevered. and as it says, there , we lost 14 babies says, there, we lost 14 babies between us. but now we are mothers. >> oh, isn't that lovely piece. >> oh, isn't that lovely piece. >> and i think their message is that miscarriage is a terrible tragedy because it people don't talk about it very much. in fact, it often because it happens before your friends or even relatives know you're pregnant, but it's terribly, terribly painful, and mother
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mothering sunday must be very difficult for some people. >> i think it must be very difficult, especially for those who lost their mothers. and who have lost their mothers. and it's the first without it's the first year without their think must their mothers. i think that must be difficult . and for those be very difficult. and for those who've lost babies, as you say, and they've got babies in heaven, that's difficult as well, right? >> yeah. well, right? >> and|. well, right? >> and you'd be thinking of those so is those on this day. so it is a very difficult day for those, but it's also a joyful day if you blessed with still you are blessed with still having your mum or you are a mum , how are you planning to spend it? >> do let us know and also if you just want to send a message, yes to a very wonderful mother, then do it through us. get in touch today! gb views at gb news pochettino.com. now that's it. thank you. >> yeah, and that would be nice . >> yeah, and that would be nice. that would be our honour actually morning share actually this morning to share those keep them those messages. so do keep them coming those messages. so do keep them conabsolutely brilliant. >> absolutely brilliant. and it's well . and i it's crufts today as well. and i do just be bit controversial. >> yes you do. >> yes you do. >> because, you know, it was miss world. last night and we were one of the few countries
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that didn't . we decided not to that didn't. we decided not to show it. and i applaud that because i think it's dreadful way in the 21st century, we shouldn't be judging people on their looks in the way that we do. it's terribly patronising and horrible, but i also think the same of dogs and i think crufts , although it's sometimes crufts, although it's sometimes quite cute to look at it y now you see, that's the part of crufts i like . we're showing the crufts i like. we're showing the sort of, you know, agility. yeah agility and obedience. and i think there's, there's nothing more wonderful than a dog who has been trained well. but it's the all the primping and preening and making dogs look not like dogs. that's what i really don't like . really don't like. >> interbreeding. that often leads to. >> yes. and pedigree breeds. >> yes. and pedigree breeds. >> yeah . >> yeah. >> yeah. >> that is the dogs that really have squashed in noses or have such squashed in noses or funny little legs that they can't a proper life . but i can't live a proper life. but i mean, at the moment we're seeing the sort of dogs you would be proud of wagging tails proud of and the wagging tails that i know that shows they that yes, i know that shows they they enjoy but, you they enjoy the fuss, but, you know, the primping and
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know, all the primping and preening dogs are preening and the no dogs are silly the inbreeding, the silly and the inbreeding, the interbreeding . interbreeding is. >> yes, it's very i. >> yeah, but think crufts is >> yeah, but i think crufts is very cute , but that's just very cute, but that's just because dogs much. so because i love dogs so much. so i'd them all and i love i'd watch them all and i love watching it. i understand watching it. but i understand what yes. watching it. but i understand whtl yes. watching it. but i understand whtl mean, yes. watching it. but i understand whtl mean, i'm yes. watching it. but i understand whtl mean, i'm not yes. watching it. but i understand whtl mean, i'm not saying it of >> i mean, i'm not saying it of all the at all. no. all of the breeds at all. no. and think a lot the and i think a lot of the breeders would, would feel the same they like same way. they think they like the they the intelligence thing, they like agility and like the agility thing. and i mean, a dog can be a total mean, and a dog can be a total pleasure real of pleasure and a real member of the family. but , pleasure and a real member of the family. but, but all the family. yeah, but, but all the family. yeah, but, but all the primping and preening and making stupid , please making them look stupid, please don't no crufts. don't do it. no crufts. >> hope that the dogs are >> and i hope that the dogs are happy as well, because that's. that the concern, that would be the concern, wouldn't wagging tail wouldn't it? the wagging tail usually shows. usually shows they hope they don't they are, but i hope they don't find . find it distressing. >> anyway, we'd your view >> anyway, we'd love your view on you think i'm on that. maybe you think i'm just harsh . just being too harsh. >> yeah. do let us know. gb views at news. >> yeah. do let us know. gb vie'com news. >> yeah. do let us know. gb vie'com now news. >> yeah. do let us know. gb vie'com now to ns. >> yeah. do let us know. gb vie'com now to our top story this >> com now to our top story this morning. thousands morning. tens of thousands of pro—palestine demonstrators have filled streets the filled the streets of the capital and elsewhere again. >> well, despite the met police revealing there were no significant public order disturbances, it's actions
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disturbances, it's the actions of the metropolitan police which are coming under scrutiny today. >> yes. a counter protester who displayed a hamas is terrorism placard was arrested after protesters turned on him and that led to a brawl. >> well, police said he was arrested for assault before being de—arrested after officers reviewed the footage. >> dear rested. however, after his arrest, he spoke and this is what he had to say. >> he told me , is it a danger >> he told me, is it a danger for your life and for the people when they see maybe attacked you? >> and what did you sign say, exactly? >> how much is terrorist? this is. yeah >> no, that was the police. >> no, that was the police. >> and that's what your sign said . said. >> i told to police. they attacked me and i want to complain. he said go to police station near your home. >> in a statement released after his arrest and arrest, the met
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clarified the initial arrest was not made in relation to his placard, well, let's speak now to nathaniel ogunye, who joins us live this morning. very good to see you this morning, nathaniel. so what did you make of the scenes that we saw yesterday ? yesterday? >> good morning. so it was a bit of a disaster. i think the metropolitan police, who are responsible for policing in london, i think if you look at the policing of the protests yesterday and you look at the policing of the illegal protest that took place on tower bridge last week , they set off flares, last week, they set off flares, they blocked traffic. and so i think the met police do have a few questions to answer. you might remember , last friday, the might remember, last friday, the prime minister set out that he'd be issuing , prime minister set out that he'd be issuing, in prime minister set out that he'd be issuing , in collaboration be issuing, in collaboration with the home secretary, new guidance forces guidance for police forces up and the country . and down the country. >> yeah, i mean, it just seems to the average onlooker as though the police simply don't know what to do . that's right. know what to do. that's right. and you can only surmise that they're not getting the right
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sort of leadership that they they each individual policeman deserves, let alone what the pubuc deserves, let alone what the public deserve . public deserve. >> right. and within london, that's an issue for the police and crime commissioner, who of course is the mayor >> yes. of course, when we're talking about the cabinet, it does feel as though the home secretary, james cleverly, and the like they are losing patience with the scenes that we're seeing on a saturday. james cleverly last week saying, i think you've made your point now and then we've got michael gove this week the the gove this week in the in the telegraph, telling good, willing people his message, good, willing to not march willing people to not march alongside extremists . alongside extremists. >> well, it's not only cabinet ministers that are losing their patience. i think many people in london are losing it too, you find that former cabinet minister robert jenrick wrote last week in the daily mail discussing the impact of these protests. i think you find that actually a lot of jewish people feel unsafe in the city at the
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weekend, and that's an unacceptable outcome. >> okay. well, no doubt we're going be seeing more of this going to be seeing more of this as the weeks go on. nathaniel, thank indeed for thank you very much indeed for joining you . as you joining us. thank you. as you look back on what happened yesterday. but my goodness, in the newspapers today, it's all royal stories. >> yes . we're reflecting that >> yes. we're reflecting that this morning. >> there's a lot a lot going on. so let's go to our royal news now. and the big sort of bombshell thing that's landed, is the memoir that's been written by earl spencer. that's of course, the brother of princess diana and the mail on sunday is running it today. and reading it makes the hairs on the back of your neck stand on end, because in it he talks about how he was sexually abused as a child and at boarding school. >> well, in an extract of his to soon be released memoir, serialised in the mail on sunday today , earl spencer reveals he today, earl spencer reveals he was targeted by a female member of staff at maidwell hall in northamptonshire in the 1970s and this abuse, he says, began
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at when he was just 11 years old. >> yeah, and the abuse went on from the headmaster as well. it's just spine tingling to read it. he's now 59, of course, and earl spencer alleges all that abuse began when he was 11 years old and has damaged him ever since. in a statement, the school has now said it is difficult to read about practices which were sadly sometimes believed to be normal and almost acceptable at the time. almost every facet of school life has evolved significantly since the 1970s. at the heart of the changes is the safeguarding of children and the safeguarding of children and the promotion of their welfare . the promotion of their welfare. >> well, joining us now is royal correspondent michael cole. good to see you this morning, michael. and this is a very distressing read, isn't it. from earl spencer. >> good morning. good morning. an absolute appalling. and, his late father, johnny spencer, who
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i knew very well , late father, johnny spencer, who i knew very well, and his stepmother, raine spencer, who i knew for 48 years and gave the eulogy at her memorial service. they would have been appalled had they known this was going on so close to all thought the stately home of the spencer family. shocking and when i think how diana protected her, her little brother, he was only four. and she was six when their mother, frances, walked out. and ever after she looked after him. diana, fortunately had a happy time at her prep school, riddlesworth hall, near thetford in norfolk, but this is shocking and disgraceful. and the people , and disgraceful. and the people, most of those people, neither of them alive, still should, hang their heads in hell or wherever they are. there we see earl spencen they are. there we see earl spencer, who has made a good career for himself as a as an
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author and historian and a very clever guy. he could have got a first at, oxford and but he's come through a lot and, fortunately in recent years by people like matt ridley, son of , people like matt ridley, son of, nicholas ridley, the politician, they've got done a lot to expose this sort of thing that went on at that time. i think it's shocking, actually, to hear the school say it was regarded as normal. well, it wasn't normal. what i live . i'm so glad that what i live. i'm so glad that i didn't have an expensive education, because my parents and those around us and my family would have been shocked by such things. and of course, as, charles spencer says, it's left a scar on his life. and i think that's without doubt that that must do . appalling. and, that must do. appalling. and, that must do. appalling. and, that such things were regarded as normal at the time is awful. and, of course, he went on to
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eton , and i think he had a much, eton, and i think he had a much, much happier time there. and he's, carried on and he's carried on the tradition of the spencer family at althorp ever since. >> it's worth pointing out, though, as well, michael, isn't it, that while some people heanng it, that while some people hearing this for the first time and reading it today may think, oh, here we've got another royal whingeing and blaming everybody else, he has done extensive research and has found that that so many of his contemporaries at the school were too ashamed to say anything at the time, but are quite happy to corroborate what went on there . it's not what went on there. it's not just him. in other words, this is huge problem and is clearly a huge problem and his telling of it is truthful . his telling of it is truthful. >> terrible. yeah, it was a pattern that went on at these these sort of schools. >> you read about it in the evening or you get hints of it elsewhere . but it is vile elsewhere. but it is vile because children are vulnerable. they are in the power of these people. there is no escape. you're within the bounds of that
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school . what says they're school. what says they're regarded when you start as god's and then you finally, suddenly find the gods have absolutely not only feet of clay, they have evil intentions . and i think evil intentions. and i think something like that happening, whether it's a little girl or a little boy, it can scar them for life. so it's deplorable, it's contemptible. and if we can root out that in our present society , out that in our present society, we'll have done a very, very good thing indeed. >> yeah, absolutely appalling. michael. in happier news, i did want to reflect on prince edward at 60, because there have been some really beautiful words exchanged between himself and his wife, sophie, this week. hasn't there ? hasn't there? >> yeah, absolutely. he he got quite emotional and he didn't mind showing it. i think it was when she said, you're my best friend. i think that was it. in fact, quite a rare public showing of emotion in the royal family. there we are, prince edward. he was of course, i remember very well on 60 years
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ago, the newspaper bulletins were printed in blue and in savoy, we were, of course, 38, which was then considered, quite an advanced age to give birth to an advanced age to give birth to a new, new baby, i knew edward. i mean, he hadn't didn't have a terribly easy time of it. he had to struggle. he had to try harder than the rest . and i. harder than the rest. and i. i knew him when he was, trying to make a success of television production at ardent productions. he worked with desmond wilcox , esther rantzen's desmond wilcox, esther rantzen's late husband. desmond desi held his hand for a long time with programs, and i helped him with the program on the duke of windsor, which was called edward on. edward. and i got to know him. he was a little bit brittle. he was a little bit, difficult , at the time, and of difficult, at the time, and of course, unfortunately , the course, unfortunately, the company ardent failed, which i think probably he didn't realise
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how difficult television is . he how difficult television is. he had a rather posh office with an atrium and marble and leggy secretaries running around. well, when you have the appurtenances of success, but you don't have success, you can burn through a lot of money very, very, very quickly . and very, very, very quickly. and that's what happened. and eventually royal said eventually the royal family said no it up, edward. just no pack it up, edward. just become a royal. and he's made a good success of that. and at this time, with the diminishing number of active royals, working royals, they're called , royals, as they're being called, he's coming into his own and he belatedly was made duke of edinburgh, which was always promised to him, by his father and his big success. and i've seen him at work on several occasions at dinners. he's been a successful leader of the duke of edinburgh award scheme, which, of course, he inherited from his father and now in his own title and in his own right. and he's taking it forward. and a lot of young people are benefiting from his work. yeah
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absolutely. >> and sophie's been a star as well, michael, thank you so much. good to talk as ever. so much. good to talk as ever. so much royal news today . yeah much royal news today. yeah i mean sophie's turned out to be a complete star, isn't she? >> clarke. >> clarke. >> yes. >> yes. >> i have so much time for her after the passing of the late queen and the emotion and the love that she so clearly came out to the people outside windsor castle, didn't she? >> she spoke in >> and she she spoke to them in a that needed to hear a way that people needed to hear . she talked he passed . she talked about how he passed peacefully held his peacefully and she held his hand. mean, honestly, hand. and i mean, honestly, she was and i think was such a star. no. and i think i'm so glad that they've become duke and duchess of edinburgh because it's a fitting and it's so lovely to see so much more of them. >> and, you know, as michael was just reflecting, they are they are stepping up the plate are stepping up to the plate now, really are having now, and they really are having their moment. >> out to their moment. >> and it's turned out to be such story. he, he such a success story. he, he was, he have easy time was, he didn't have an easy time at when he tried at the beginning when he tried to marines, and that to join the marines, and that sort failed. everybody sort of failed. and everybody regarded . i think regarded him as a wimp. i think he had he had terrible trouble. but sophie has been the strength behind him. i think the making
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of him. yeah, really has. and they've got a lovely family and they've got a lovely family and they all do well and there's somebody to be proud of. yeah, i think brilliant . think that's brilliant. >> of time for the >> i've got lots of time for the two them. two of them. >> can't believe it's >> i can't believe it's 60 though. he's always though. yeah he's always been the family the kid of the family really. >> know and there's most >> i know and there's the most wonderful him on the wonderful photo of him on the front express front of the sunday express today lovely tiny today with a lovely tiny labrador. there he is, labrador. yeah, there he is, prince edward. happy birthday to him. >> and we are wondering whether we're going to get an official photograph mother's day from photograph for mother's day from kensington palace at some point dunng kensington palace at some point during obviously, during the morning, obviously, as soon as we get it, we'll show you it will be of you whether it will be of princess catherine or maybe just william and the children. >> who knows? but there's a there's a sort of hint that we're going to get an official kensington palace mother's day photograph. well, i hope it can't out, then. can't leave kate out, then. >> be wonderful to see >> can it be wonderful to see her? would her? yeah, it really would be. i guess it depends it's a, guess it depends whether it's a, you know, a recent photo or whether old and whether it's an old one. and a lot of a lot will be. well, we'll see. i'm sure we will see. we'll you on breakfast. >> happy mother's day. >> yes. so happy mother's day. and get in touch
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and don't forget to get in touch with if you want to give a with us. if you want to give a call out to mother you call out to a mother you particularly and value, or particularly love and value, or tell you're celebrating tell us how you're celebrating mother's vaiews@gbnews.com. now the time is 6:19. >> now the time is 6:19. >> now the time is 6:19. >> if you have just joined us, here's a reminder of our top stories and the ministry of defence has confirmed reports of a fire on board its flagship aircraft carrier, hms queen elizabeth. the royal navy vessel is currently docked in scotland. the mod said the fire was quickly brought under control with no reported injuries . with no reported injuries. >> as a united states military ship is heading towards the middle east carrying aid equipment to build the temporary pier that we're hearing so much about off the coast of gaza. president biden has confirmed that the us would build this floating harbour to get help and more aid to gaza by sea, after aid deliveries by land and air have proved really difficult and in some cases dangerous. >> humberside police have removed a number of bodies from the premises of a funeral
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director in hull, after reports of concern for care of the deceased. cordons are in place at three branches of legacy independent funeral directors in east yorkshire. they're investigating whether any criminal offences have been committed . committed. >> well, as you cannot escape, it's mother's day today . a time it's mother's day today. a time to celebrate mothers everywhere. >> yes. gifts and cards are being brought to shower our mums in love and affection , along in love and affection, along with going out for food and dnnks with going out for food and drinks to mark the occasion. mother's day is also a boost for businesses, a huge boost to business. >> our yorkshire reporter anna riley went along to a mother's day event harrogate, which is day event in harrogate, which is aimed trade in the aimed at increasing trade in the town this weekend. >> 321 go go go . >> 321 go go go. >> 321 go go go. >> it's mothering fun day in harrogate , a free inflatable harrogate, a free inflatable event for mums and children to win top mother's day themed
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pnzes. win top mother's day themed prizes . the dash win top mother's day themed prizes. the dash and grab game is hosted by harrogate improvement district, with the aim of boosting sales for businesses in the town this weekend. i think at the moment it's really important to support local businesses because we're in a cost of living crisis. >> there's challenges around. the budget was announced this week, challenges week, so there's challenges around around around business rates, around rent so rent that businesses pay. so every every penny that people can support, local businesses and retailers really and national retailers really does matter. so whether it's harrogate it's other does matter. so whether it's harrogeor it's other does matter. so whether it's harrogeor city it's other does matter. so whether it's harrogeor city centre, it's other a town or city centre, it's really important now more than ever your town . ever to support your local town. so mother's day, father's day, christmas, summer holidays, it's just just a really good just it's just a really good time to support businesses, to increase increase increase footfall, increase spend and just celebrate those people you. people that matter to you. >> with joy. mums and >> bouncing with joy. mums and kids here enjoy tradition of kids here enjoy the tradition of mother's day. it's a special occasion to honour and appreciate mothers for their love, care and hard work. >> well, i think it's nice. i think mums often do a lot of stuff quite thankless stuff don't they? yeah, it's nice don't they? so yeah, it's nice to recognised . to be recognised.
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>> to be able spend >> i'm going to be able to spend it mum my partner's it with my mum and my partner's mum, but also this one as well. so going have really so we're going to have a really nice day together celebrating harrogate. going to be >> and yeah, it's going to be really fun because it's about loving your mum this year. >> happy mother's day and we wanted to celebrate it for our mother's day. she looks after us, i mean going to the shops and getting her some chocolate. >> it shows her that, that she's really special and we all love her, so it's just nice to have a special day to celebrate her with. >> shoppers in britain expected to spend £1.7 billion on mother's day this year , the mother's day this year, the celebration is a triumph for trade as well as a fun time for families. anna riley gb news, harrogate . harrogate. >> well, happy mother's day to
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all mothers out there , including all mothers out there, including yuan.thank all mothers out there, including yuan. thank you and my lovely mum joan , who may or may not be mum joan, who may or may not be up yet. depends if the dogs up or not, i think. and my granny as well. dorothy, they're the best mum and the best granny in the whole world. i'm very, very lucky. so happy mother's day to the two of you. >> absolutely . and don't forget >> absolutely. and don't forget to in touch us if you to get in touch with us if you want to give a call to want to, to give a call out to a mum you especially admire or love, you know how to do it. it's gbviews@gbnews.com now let's go to the united states where you are no doubt feeling a sense of deja vu. they must be. president biden and former president biden and former president trump are back on the campaign trail. >> yes, both biden and trump have headed to georgia, where they're both continuing their primary campaign in one of the country's most marginal states. >> well, the chair of republicans overseas uk, greg swenson , is here with us now. swenson, is here with us now. hello. why are they both in georgia? why is it such an important place? >> of the swing states. >> it's one of the swing states. biden won 2020. trump won
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biden won it in 2020. trump won it in 2016. so it's, you know, considered a swing state, my guessis considered a swing state, my guess is trump will win it this this time around. but it's an important state for both candidates right now. >> so are they in the same venue? i mean, are they going to be speaking each other? be speaking at each other? >> they will not. that would be speaking at each other? >> excitingy will not. that would be speaking at each other? >> exciting fireworks. that would be speaking at each other? >> exciting fireworks. and! would be speaking at each other? >> exciting fireworks. and |nould be exciting fireworks. and i don't think there will be that occasion. you know, it'll be the first time since 1960 that or 56 that there wasn't a televised debate between candidates. there will be. biden just doesn't want to . and i can't imagine his his to. and i can't imagine his his handlers would allow him to. he had a he he was able to get through thursday night with state of the union address without any major gaffes, plenty of small ones, but i just can't imagine they would let him because i think trump would just really crush him a debate. really crush him on in a debate. >> i mean, but following on from that state of the union address, biden , to be fair him, did biden, to be fair to him, did seem have the energy last seem to have the energy last night, on those punchy night, continued on those punchy points. yeah. talking about night, continued on those punchy poiiage,’eah. talking about night, continued on those punchy poiiage, he]. talking about night, continued on those punchy poiiage, he was talking about night, continued on those punchy poiiage, he was saying,ig about night, continued on those punchy poiiage, he was saying, look, ut his age, he was saying, look, i know i'm he knows that's know i'm old. he knows that's his weakest point aren't
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his his weakest point aren't sure, but he says, look, this is just experience. yeah >> you know, if thursday's goal and i think it was , was to and i think it was, was to demonstrate that he could get through or and through an hour or hour and a half speech without major half speech without any major gaffes , you know, energy gaffes or, you know, energy problems. you know, they did a good job, whether it was enhanced with, you know, miracle drugs or steroids or whatever. i'm kidding. but, you know, he did succeed in doing that because it was an hour and a half of sort of primal scream therapy and designed really as a, as a proof of life moment, just, you know, that that was the goal really. >> and it came across that way, didn't it? >> it yeah. it was almost >> it did. yeah. it was almost too it was, was 100% too good, it was, it was 100% campaign . it was very campaign speech. it was very angry. he was shouting the whole time. he needed to do time. i think he needed to do that because if he, if he, when he, whenever he started meandering end a topic meandering at the end of a topic or statement , he'd start or a statement, he'd start screaming again. and i think that was in order to just keep that was in order to just keep that energy. >> but he but he sort of handled the hecklers, didn't he? yeah.
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he at them . yeah. he fought back at them. yeah. >> i mean, look, the you know, if again if the bar was pretty low, i mean most people just wanted to see him get through it. yeah. policy, on it. yeah. on on policy, on telling the truth. not a great night for him. but in terms of just yelling and screaming and primal scream therapy, you know, it was it was a good night for the president. >> i mean, let's look donald >> i mean, let's look at donald trump, because he too trump, shall we? because he too has georgia has his problems in georgia because home to one of the because it's home to one of the four criminal charges against him at the moment. >> yeah. so in fulton county, where there's some drama going on there because the prosecutor that was hired by the da turned out to be her boyfriend . and out to be her boyfriend. and that's usually frowned upon in legal so you know that legal circles. so you know that that could end up being overturned. just on that. but it's probably a fairly hostile jury it's probably a fairly hostile jury pool. so even though these indictments don't really have a lot of merit to them, and they're clearly political , none they're clearly political, none of them were made. the indictments were not made. interestingly until trump declared that he was running
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again. so they had the evidence , again. so they had the evidence, so—called evidence for two years and and then when he and sat on it. and then when he declared all of a sudden, you know, the indictments know, let's get the indictments going. know, but do going. so you know, but they do have the only have hostile juries. the only friendly pool possibly is friendly jury pool possibly is in florida, in south florida. but county, new york and but fulton county, new york and washington are not exactly friendly places for conservative. >> now, we've got quite a few to get through, haven't we? oh, yeah. >> it's going to be a lot of drama. and they're jammed in, you know, they're trying get you know, they're trying to get them done or at least started before election . before the election. >> and think it's just the >> and i think it's just the pressure ongoing pressure of this ongoing sequence primary is and all, sequence of primary is and all, surely. i mean, trump's counter campaign , adverts they're saying campaign, adverts they're saying is biden up to next year? is he up to the year after. is he up to this? and you wonder that about both of them? because they're they both have age they're both they both have age issues if like. yeah. and issues if you like. yeah. and the is enormous, no the pressure is enormous, no doubt about it. >> i mean trump trump will be you know, if he were to win at the end of the time, he'll be the end of the time, he'll be the same as now. the same age as biden now. i mean, know, it's an issue if mean, you know, it's an issue if you look polling, it
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you look at the polling, it definitely president definitely favours president trump, you know, 75% trump, though. so you know, 75% of americans think biden too of americans think biden is too old. trump's polling around old. and trump's polling around 50 on that topic. so, you know, i think trump is viewed as someone who's got, you know, more energy and more cognitive confidence. and that's really the issue for biden. it's not the issue for biden. it's not the age, it's the absolute failures of his policies, but the cognitive challenge that he's experiencing. so it's pretty obvious. >> greg swenson , good to see >> greg swenson, good to see you. good to be here. >> thank you. thanks for having me. >> indeed. me. >> fascinating stuff. isn't it? only to get more so i only going to get more so i think right at let's catch think right at 629. let's catch up weather. here's greg. >> with a brighter outlook, with boxt solar sponsors of weather on . gb news. on. gb news. >> hello. good morning. welcome to your latest gb news weather from the met office. it's going to be a cloudy day today. there'll be outbreaks of light rain and drizzle , and it's still rain and drizzle, and it's still a feel for time of a chilly feel for the time of year too . and looking at the
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year too. and looking at the picture for this morning, a lot of the uk. of cloud across the uk. outbreaks rain across many outbreaks of rain across many areas bit of sunshine areas just a bit of sunshine towards the southwest and that remains so for the afternoon too. but this could trigger 1 or 2 showers as we move through into the evening time elsewhere. generally, it stays cloudy for much the day , outbreaks of much of the day, outbreaks of light rain and drizzle, and the wind still coming off the wind still coming in off the north sea. chilly feel for north sea. so a chilly feel for many us into the evening many of us into the evening time. this rain will continue to push its way westward. still a lot of low cloud behind it . push its way westward. still a lot of low cloud behind it. some drizzle in places too, so a damp evening to come and that takes us into monday as well. it remains cloudy through sunday night. further outbreaks of light rain and drizzle in places, some low cloud leading to some foggy conditions over the higher ground and temperatures again falling to around mid single figures due to the cloud cover not falling too low at all, but it does mean another cloudy grey start to monday . outbreaks of rain and monday. outbreaks of rain and drizzle feeding in off the north sea, particularly down these eastern areas, remaining quite
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sea, particularly down these easterforreas, remaining quite sea, particularly down these easterforreas, rof aining quite sea, particularly down these easterforreas, rof the ng quite sea, particularly down these easterforreas, rof the day uite sea, particularly down these easterforreas, rof the day .ite sea, particularly down these easterforreas, rof the day . best damp for much of the day. best of any brighter spells will be towards coast, but even towards western coast, but even here it will remain largely cloudy through day . some cloudy through the day. some showery rain for northern ireland too, and temperatures just about getting into double figures. you soon. figures. see you soon. >> looks like things are heating up boxt boiler showers. sponsors of weather on gb news. >> hmm'hmm. and now is your chance to enter our latest great british giveaway and win £12,345 in cash and a whole host of treats . treats. >> we're springing into spring and giving you the chance to win the seasonal essentials first. there's an incredible . £12,345 there's an incredible. £12,345 in tax free cash to be won, plus a spring shopping spree with £500 in shopping vouchers to spendin £500 in shopping vouchers to spend in the store of your choice. and finally, a garden gadget package to enjoy, including a handheld games console, a portable smart
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speaker and a pizza oven for your chance to win the vouchers. the treats and £12,345 in tax free cash text gb win to 84 9002. text cost £2 plus one standard network rate message or post your name and number two gb zero three, po box 8690. derby dhi zero three, po box 8690. derby dh1 nine, double t, uk only entrants must be 18 or over. lines closed at 5 pm. on friday the 29th march. full terms and privacy notice at gbnews.com forward slash win. please check the closing time if watching or listening on demand. good luck. >> yes, good luck indeed. now still to come, we'll be looking at the glitz and glam of this evening's academy awards with the very glitzy and very glamorous stephanie takyi. she'll make it fun, i promise. >> yeah, i know, honestly . don't >> yeah, i know, honestly. don't you find oscars a bit of you find the oscars a bit of a bore, though? >> unless there's >> yeah, well, unless there's a punch smith. >> yeah, well, unless there's a purwell, smith. >> yeah, well, unless there's a purwell, worth smith. >> yeah, well, unless there's a purwell, worth seeing. >> well, that was worth seeing. that interesting. it did that made it interesting. it did 7 that made it interesting. it did ? tonight. ? well, that happened tonight. >> knows. stay >> who knows? who knows. stay
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tuned. steph will tell
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next. welcome back. you are watching and listening to breakfast with anne and eliot. and listening to breakfast with anne and eliot . a happy mother's and listening to breakfast with annito nd eliot . a happy mother's and listening to breakfast with annito alleliot . a happy mother's and listening to breakfast with annito all you . a happy mother's and listening to breakfast with annito all you mumsppy mother's and listening to breakfast with annito all you mumsppy therezr's and listening to breakfast with annito all you mumsppy there .'s day to all you mums out there. and we've got some really lovely emails coming in on mother's day today. oh shall i out this today. oh shall i read out this one from jo? >> yes. today little sad >> yes. today is a little sad for me . >> yes. today is a little sad for me. having had for me. having never had children through personal choice, considered choice, i still considered myself a mum to my pets. in january year i bid january this year i had to bid farewell to my beautiful black labrador, my best labrador, tia. she was my best friend, my companion and my baby. we spent an amazing 16 years together. god bless you for highlighting those that will find today a little difficult. >> oh, fred says morning both. i will remember, especially my late suffered for late wife who suffered for miscarriages, but we were blessed as well to have three sons and one daughter. we also have five grandsons, three of whom unfortunately she didn't live to see. but this is a very, very special day for us. while
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fred, a very happy mother's day to wife . to your late wife. >> oh, yeah, and a quick one from jay. morning, jay. can you shout out my mum bath who should be gb this be watching gb news this morning? because i've banned her from all other from watching all other news channels they're poor channels because they're so poor quality and gb is the best. quality and gb news is the best. he i don't good way for he says it. i don't good way for me to check if she was watching. later when go for dinner. later when i go over for dinner. >> oh and jeffrey morris >> oh yeah, and jeffrey morris said, would shout out said, i would like to shout out my mum, the best mum. her my mum, she is the best mum. her name gweneth morris . well name is gweneth morris. well gwyneth happy mother's name is gweneth morris. well gwytoth happy mother's day to you. >> oh i've got to do this one from michelle. i know we're going to many messages going to get so many messages and you. keep them coming. and thank you. keep them coming. yes, says up yes, michelle says i've got up especially a to especially early for a sunday to get freshly goodies get some freshly baked goodies from mum's favourite bakery from my mum's favourite bakery in before heading over from my mum's favourite bakery in my before heading over from my mum's favourite bakery in my daughtere heading over from my mum's favourite bakery in my daughter and ading over from my mum's favourite bakery in my daughter and brother.er with my daughter and brother. she is an inspiration. she looks glam every day with a boundless energy that exceeds my own. she is the best. nana i love you mum. oh that's so lovely so much. >> we knew we'd get some lovely shout out. i think it's going to be an emotional sunday, but do
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you keep sending them in? it's an absolute for to an absolute honour for us to read out. is so happy read them out. it is so happy mother's you all and mother's day to you all and we really you enjoy really hope you enjoy celebrating. of celebrating. and for those of you day difficult, you that find day difficult, sending to as sending lots of love to you as well . gb views at sending lots of love to you as well. gb views at gb sending lots of love to you as well . gb views at gb news. com well. gb views at gb news. com do them in now. do keep sending them in now. >> oscars night tonight. >> it's oscars night tonight. biggest entertainment. >> it's oscars night tonight. bigthey entertainment. >> it's oscars night tonight. bigthey say entertainment. >> it's oscars night tonight. bigthey say , entertainment. >> it's oscars night tonight. bigthey say , everything.1ment. >> it's oscars night tonight. bigthey say , everything. inent. >> it's oscars night tonight. bigthey say , everything. i do t. so they say, everything. i do find it sometimes a bit. ooh anyway, it's commonly known as the oscars , who will get one? do the oscars, who will get one? do you care? i don't know, stephanie takyi is here, though, to tell us the latest. i mean, i always think the trouble with the oscars is that we in britain haven't watched the movies haven't watched half the movies that they're talking about. well, problem. that they're talking about. weilike, problem. that they're talking about. weilike, if problem. that they're talking about. weilike, if you're roblem. that they're talking about. weilike, if you're in)lem. that they're talking about. weilike, if you're in the|. >> like, if you're in the industry, really excited >> like, if you're in the industthe really excited >> like, if you're in the industthe movies really excited >> like, if you're in the industthe movies because :ited >> like, if you're in the industthe movies because i've about the movies because i've seen them cannes, venice . but seen them at cannes, venice. but for joe, sorry, for the ordinary, joe, sorry, darling . sorry, darlings, but darling. sorry, darlings, but for the, you know , average for the, you know, average cinema goer, they haven't seen them. but the good thing about watching awards is then it makes you films you you aware of what films you should about , you aware of what films you should about, or what films should know about, or what films you back watch. but you can go back and watch. but oppenheimer , we've all heard of oppenheimer, we've all heard of that. oppenheimer. right. and i think be
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think tonight's going to be a big for oppenheimer. the big night for oppenheimer. the oscars a staggering 13 oscars up for a staggering 13 awards, including best picture, oscars up for a staggering 13 awaractor:luding best picture, oscars up for a staggering 13 awar actor foriing best picture, oscars up for a staggering 13 awar actor for cillianst picture, oscars up for a staggering 13 awar actor for cillian murphy. , best actor for cillian murphy. he's done well at the baftas. he's done well at the baftas. he's done well at the golden globes. so if he does win tonight, he will be the first irish actor to best actor . irish actor to win best actor. >> but we're seeing pictures there of the barbie lot. >> yeah, ryan gosling , there of the barbie lot. >> yeah, ryan gosling, he's going to performing tonight. going to be performing tonight. ryan performing. ryan gosling will be performing. i'm just a ken from the barbie movie, and he's to movie, and he's going to be surrounded by 65 hunks. so i think that's going to be a moment me to watch. but moment for me to watch. but elsewhere the elsewhere with barbie, the biggest is biggest thing about oscars is they did get snubbed. margot robbie best actress , robbie didn't get best actress, greta gerwig didn't get best director, but film itself is director, but the film itself is up for eight nominations, which is still pretty good. >> it's for nomination for >> it's up for nomination for best i gather she was best movie, and i gather she was sort producer of it as well. sort of producer of it as well. >> yeah, she was. >> yeah, she was. >> so she she'll do well if it just becomes well. >> i think that's why >> and i think that's why they've of taken they've kind of taken it on their like, their chin because they're like, i at all. i don't think it's not at all. oppenheimer going to do it, oppenheimer is going to do it, but think they've on but i think they've taken it on their because know their chin because they know it's it it's still an achievement. it was box office.
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was great in the box office. so it's up for eight nominations tonight, well, but tonight, so it may do well, but i predict also poor things, which stars emma stone, which is a reimagining of the feminist frankenstein . i think that could frankenstein. i think that could do well tonight. >> have you seen that, stephanie? >> yes, i have, i think. >> yes, i have, i think. >> did you find it? >> did you find it? >> i think it's quite arty. i think she does a brilliant performance why think she does a brilliant perf0|been:e why think she does a brilliant perf0|been winning why think she does a brilliant perf0|been winning a why think she does a brilliant perf0|been winning a of 1y she's been winning a lot of awards this season. does awards this season. if she does win it be her win tonight, it will be her second best actress . second oscar as best actress. feminism. feminine of feminism. feminine version of frankenstein. and it's the frankenstein. yeah and it's the cinematography and it's great. she's been doing really well all award season, but i think she might lose out tonight to lily gladstone, who stars in martin scorsese's killers of the flower moon. >> another one i haven't seen. yeah but i did see maestro, and that was a bit of a self—important bore. >> yeah, that's up for eight nominations, yeah, tonight nominations, but yeah, tonight i'm any. hopefully i'm not expecting any. hopefully controversy like will smith's will smith slapping someone because he's not invited. but there is. they've had to beef up their security because of protesters security. and protesters lay security. and police have said that they've
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put ring of steel around the put a ring of steel around the red carpet from protesters from both sides , both israel and both sides, both israel and palestine. so i think we might see some stuff tomorrow morning. >> yes. and we may get some speeches that actually mention something. >> yeah. well, it's going to be on tonight . the show is on itv tonight. the show is going to be three hours and a half long from 1015. if you guys can to stay to watch can manage to stay up to watch it, apparently want it it, but apparently they want it to sharp and swift, so to be quite sharp and swift, so maybe some short maybe we might see some short speeches tonight. >> yeah, but these self—important like >> yeah, but these se have portant like >> yeah, but these se have their. tl like >> yeah, but these se have their. yeah, like >> yeah, but these se have their. yeah, they likeike to have their. yeah, they like to have their. yeah, they like to say, don't they? >> they have thank their mums >> they have to thank their mums . should and . yeah, well they should and thank . yeah, well they should and tha oh actually no, it's probably >> oh actually no, it's probably not mother's the usa is not mother's day in the usa is it. it's in may. not mother's day in the usa is it. yeah.; in may. >> yeah. >> yeah. >> it's may. >> it's may. >> yeah, yeah. >> yeah, yeah. >> there oh well. >> there you go. oh well. >> there you go. oh well. >> it'll on tonight. >> well it'll be on tonight. >> well it'll be on tonight. >> stephanie. well done. >> thanks, stephanie. well done. lots forward to. lots to look forward to. shall we look sports we take a look at the sports now. aidan magee is here with we take a look at the sports novmorning.’iagee is here with we take a look at the sports nov morning. 'iagee morningvith we take a look at the sports nov morning. 'iagee morningvitiyou both. >> good morning. what's up in sports? in sports, land the six nations. >> yeah. >> yeah. >> six nations alive >> six nations came alive yesterday day. it's been. i'm not going to say dull because we've seen some good quality rugby the 5 or 6
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rugby over the last 5 or 6 weeks, it's been quite weeks, but it's been quite processional . yeah. it was processional. yeah. it was brilliant. it's been quite processional far. the processional so far. all the teams you expect on each teams you expect to win on each individual won with individual match have won with the exception of the possible exception of ireland going france on ireland going to france on opening a of opening night. that was a bit of a surprise, ireland didn't a surprise, but ireland didn't see in the world, see the best team in the world, so not. however, yesterday so maybe not. however, yesterday completely with a last gasp england win with a last gasp drop kick. in the best tradition of england victories in the past. when you think about, argentina before christmas , the argentina before christmas, the drop kicking extravaganza they gave in that game and of course 2003, the world cup. lewis moody yesterday when we spoke to him , yesterday when we spoke to him, he was saying there was no chance win this chance england could win this match. psychology proved match. and yet psychology proved to be an issue for ireland again. they don't again. and because they don't get the quarter final at get past the quarter final at the despite being get past the quarter final at the as despite being get past the quarter final at the as bestspite being get past the quarter final at the as best team 3eing get past the quarter final at the as best team in ng get past the quarter final at the as best team in the billed as the best team in the world, struggle at world, they struggle at twickenham. struggled twickenham. they struggled again yesterday. it. 2322 twickenham. they struggled again yesteimoment it. 2322 twickenham. they struggled again yesteimoment for it. 2322 twickenham. they struggled again yesteimoment for marcus. 2322 twickenham. they struggled again yesteimoment for marcus smith as great moment for marcus smith as well. he's been out for the last three matches with a calf injury . he wasn't under the . he wasn't trusted under the previous jones . and previous coach, eddie jones. and so for him to do that, as i say in the best traditions of some of england's greatest victories
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of england's greatest victories of time, was truly of all time, was truly magnificent . the captain, jamie magnificent. the captain, jamie george, his george, said. this is his proudest his of his proudest moment of his of his career. it's not going to be enough for england to land the six nations, and think ireland six nations, and i think ireland is to do it the is still going to do it with the bonus points they have. but nonetheless it just, it just it was just something that reversed what we'd seen the last few what we'd seen in the last few weeks . as i say, been quite weeks. as i say, it's been quite sort predictable. and again , sort of predictable. and again, in rome, i mean, this is even more this one. more sensational, this one. italy spoon is italy are the wooden spoon is every they won, they every single time they won, they lost 26 home matches in a row. they hadn't won a home match in 11 years. it's dreadful. yeah. i mean they win the wooden spoon near every time. and then near enough every time. and then scotland lose . 3129 just scotland go and lose. 3129 just pure complacency. and because scotland have recorded some notable victories, including over england a couple of weeks ago in this in this tournament and so to go and lose that one yesterday really was embarrassing. and i mean scotland had a chance of winning this tournament until yesterday . this tournament until yesterday. and so we've got and we've got france up today against wales as well. so it came alive
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yesterday. we saw some good stories. saw shock stories. we saw some shock results that's sports results and that's what sports should why we should be about. that's why we love it because the unknown love it because it's the unknown isn't unpredictability absolutely. >> tell. there's always lots of little things going bubbling underneath . we will talk underneath. we will talk football see football next when we see you next. absolutely. yeah next. yeah. absolutely. yeah okay. but at the moment we don't want to run out because want to run out of time because we're to looking at the we're going to be looking at the newspapers it being we're going to be looking at the newspapit's it being we're going to be looking at the newspapit's full it being we're going to be looking at the newspapit's full of it being we're going to be looking at the newspapit's full of royal! being sunday, it's full of royal stories and lots of other things besides. so do join us again, a couple of moments to look through papers.
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>> welcome back. you're watching and listening to breakfast with ellie and anne. and we're going to take a look at some of the newspaper front pages for you how. >> now. >> yeah, starting with the mail on sunday. and that's big on sunday. and that's the big bombshell, leading bombshell, because it's leading with allegations diana's with allegations made by diana's princess brother , earl princess diana's brother, earl spencen princess diana's brother, earl spencer, that he was sexually
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abused by the school assistant matron. he was sexually abused from 11. and it's quite a revelation, very very controversial. yeah i would say if you're going to read one thing today that would it really. and the school's not denying it. >> no not at all. the >> no, no not at all. the observer leads with legal fears over gove's new over michael gove's new definition of extremism. >> the sunday express leads with the labour party being branded cowards over the boat migrant crisis. >> the sunday telegraph leads with michael gove's warning for protesters not to march alongside extremists and the sunday times leads. >> this is astonishing, too , >> this is astonishing, too, with boris johnson flying out for secret talks with venezuela's leader . venezuela's leader. >> well, joining us now to go through what's making the news this morning is personal finance and consumer commentator and consumer affairs commentator georgie frost and broadcaster pete price . really good to see pete price. really good to see you both this morning. and
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georgie should we start with the sunday telegraph? and it's michael gove's comments to pro—palestine protesters . pro—palestine protesters. >> yeah, indeed. that don't march alongside extremists, goes tells protesters yes , indeed. as tells protesters yes, indeed. as you mentioned there, it was all about this new extremism , about this new extremism, definition. i think that obviously we saw many people march in london. we're seeing, you know, anti—semitic , at you know, anti—semitic, at record highs in london and the government are trying to get on top of this . i would suggest, top of this. i would suggest, look, i think there's a bit of political politicking involved in this, but there's also related to , as i said, the related to, as i said, the government's new definition, whatever that might be, of extremism , i think what people extremism, i think what people would want to is it's not would want to know is it's not so much about the definitions, it's about enforcement. are it's about the enforcement. are we going to get enforcement of it rather than and when i say politically politicking, i mean more are going get more more you are going to get more stories. and we're talking about them in the front pages today about immigration, about extremism, things that the tory
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party can set out. i believe, as their stall ahead of what? >> how can you enforce it? how can you enforce it with such crowds of people? how? >> well, it does appear, doesn't it, that police actually don't know how to enforce it. that's half the difficulty. they don't know how to face it. >> i understand that, and the people are marching, are people who are marching, are playing. playing the playing. they're playing the police in some cases, police for fools in some cases, aren't they? because some of them are shouting from the river to the sea and whatever they're deliberately , flagrant comments, deliberately, flagrant comments, holding up certain banners covering their faces. but within seconds they'll take the face coverings off. they'll stop the chanting before the police can actually intervene. >> anyway, the sad thing is, so many people are doing it for the right reasons and they're being manipulated . yes. and when you manipulated. yes. and when you see them on television, saw see them on television, i saw them news. the other day. them on gb news. the other day. they realise being they don't realise they're being manipulated. . you are manipulated. i'm sorry. you are being manipulated. >> think, i think >> i think, i think, i think it's incredibly difficult specifically for police
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specifically for the police to know you. and i know this is rather an unpopular position here. like there are some chants and some things that are absolutely unacceptable . they absolutely unacceptable. they are defined. but we need to protect right to freedom of protect the right to freedom of speech. and this is where this balance in. right to balance comes in. the right to protest. so get very nervous protest. so i get very nervous when politicians when you have politicians talking about redefinition of extremism in almost a backlash of something that's been going on at the time. look consider this look at the laws that we have. this look at the laws that we have . are they fit for purpose have. are they fit for purpose across all sort of walks of life and demographics and those sorts of things? because we've had this issue with, you know, is it doesit this issue with, you know, is it does it mean that, say, gender critical women are going to be encompassed this? people who encompassed in this? people who are religious, just religious christians muslims going are religious, just religious ch be ians muslims going are religious, just religious ch be encompassedns going are religious, just religious ch be encompassed in going are religious, just religious ch be encompassed in thisgoing are religious, just religious ch be encompassed in this new| to be encompassed in this new definition of extremist and therefore don't have the freedom to go out and make protest. >> it's a total minefield , as >> it's a total minefield, as you just said, it's a total minefield. and whatever you say, we're living in this world of woke now. so that also is added
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to it. so how can you how many people were in london yesterday? how can you possibly police those people and hear every word they say? everything they're talking about, it's an absolute minefield. >> and judge them on the spot, on the pavement. judge them for the way they said something frightening . frightening. >> and look, if the police go in there handed, the there heavy handed, it's the police going get in police that are going to get in trouble. have trouble. but they have absolutely right, absolutely every right, we should but the should say, to protests. but the police have really, really, police have a really, really, i think, balancing act. think, difficult balancing act. and leadership and it does need leadership and definition about what is acceptable and what is not, because they're clearly struggling moment. because they're clearly strland ng moment. because they're clearly strland ng course,noment. because they're clearly strland ng course, everybody's >> and of course, everybody's got and their got their phones and their video, you've got video, everything. so you've got all that and that's the videos you see. you never see the video , the negative the police. >> that's em“ >> well that's what we saw happen yesterday, didn't we? it was a counter—protester was was a counter—protester who was arrested yesterday. he had a well, he alleges he had well, he alleges that he had a placard up saying that hamas are terrorists. he says he was arrested for holding that placard. >> the police deny that though, don't say wasn't the >> they say that wasn't the case. he was arrested for
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assault a separate incident. assault in a separate incident. he then de—arrested he was then de—arrested after they'd footage . but they'd reviewed the footage. but that just goes to show, doesn't it? the whole thing was filmed . it? the whole thing was filmed. it escalated online. there was one case of all those thousands of people. >> it is one stupid case and it was a stupid case compared to what's going on. >> it's very difficult for the police to police these protests, i'm sure. and i still think it is intimidating, not the fact that you're jewish. >> it's intimidating seeing crowds like that coming into london. it's nothing to do. >> we always know that big protests always attract people that are there just for trouble. and that's the problem. and they make the headlines , and they make the headlines, and they certainly trending certainly cause the trending xs or tweets or whatever or whatever tweets or whatever you call them. pete, let's go to the express front page, the sunday express front page, where james cleverly is lashing out at the labour party, calling them cowards and hypocrites . yes. >> but what? well, they're saying this. they're criticising everything about the small boats
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situation and the immigrants coming in, the illegal immigrants coming in. but they won't do anything about it. that's what they're saying. they won't do anything about it. i'm going be controversial now going to be controversial now and think they should and said, i think they should send some people to rwanda and watch them and find out what life is like for them. and instead of all this money being wasted, you know, it's a warmer country. it could be a good place to send them , but just place to send them, but just send a group, i don't know, 20 people and have them watched and see what life's like, because it's all very well. keir starmer and the labour party having a go at the conservatives, nobody has got the answer . i at the conservatives, nobody has got the answer. i think all politicians should get together got the answer. i think all pcthey've; should get together got the answer. i think all pcthey've got)uld get together got the answer. i think all pcthey've got an! get together got the answer. i think all pcthey've got an answergether got the answer. i think all pcthey've got an answer and er got the answer. i think all pcthey've got an answer and all if they've got an answer and all politicians should say, this is how we're going to get rid of. >> that's such a good idea, isn't it? >> i'm pretty sure that they've sent people out there already. >> going very >> it's going to be very difficult for them to simulate what look, what it would be like. look, this through the court. this has gone through the court. my this has gone through the court. my issue is that is the my big issue is that this is the flagship , okay? this is costing flagship, okay? this is costing
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billions. the illegal immigration migration is costing billions as well. let's not you know, we're spending 8 million a day on hotel bills , i believe, day on hotel bills, i believe, which is destroying local communities. no bones about communities. make no bones about it. something needs to get done. but feels like this is the but it feels like this is the only thing for the conservatives. and if this doesn't work, what is plan b, c, d, f ? you know, we do need to d, e, f? you know, we do need to boost border security, which is what labour are saying now . they what labour are saying now. they need to it. they need to need to cost it. they need to write exactly they're write down exactly what they're going know, we do going to do. but you know, we do need the criminal need to smash the criminal gangs. to make it so gangs. we need to make it so that people want come that people don't want to come over fear of over here. if the fear of travelling on channel travelling on the channel crossing where you could die isn't enough to turn people off, off going to rwanda on a bill that's going to take years to pass through is really not going to be turning people off either. we absolutely need to have, you know, multilateral agreements with the eu, particularly. we need to beef security and, need to beef up security and, yeah, we need something meaningful. >> what about your idea, pete, though , instead of conservative
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though, instead of conservative and know, ripping and labour, you know, ripping pieces out of each other over this, why don't they set up some sort of a cross party? >> a lot more respect sort of a cross party? >> them, a lot more respect sort of a cross party? >> them, a a lot more respect sort of a cross party? >> them, a lota lot more respect sort of a cross party? >> them, a lot more�*nore respect sort of a cross party? >> them, a lot more�*nore resforzt for them, a lot more respect for the labour. >> they win the next >> if they win the next election, to to election, are going to have to deal this. deal with this. >> absolutely . and say, >> absolutely. and as you say, about across poor about coming across that poor child that was in the child that was killed in the river, drowned , and the river, who was drowned, and the parents have said, we are still going to come to england if we're dealing with people like that. what can we possibly do to stop and deter people , get rid stop and deter people, get rid of the gangs? >> that's absolutely where. >> that's absolutely where. >> but how do you get rid of the gangs? can never get rid of gangs? you can never get rid of the mafia those years, the mafia over all those years, you never how do get you could never how do you get rid gangs? so much money rid of the gangs? so much money being made. it's terrible . yeah. being made. it's terrible. yeah. >> look, we've only got a minute left, and while there's lots in the papers to talk about, it is mother's day. and i just wondered , if wanted to wondered if, if you wanted to say on on the say anything on the, on the subject of mother's day, i would love say. subject of mother's day, i would lowand say. subject of mother's day, i would lowand lay. subject of mother's day, i would lowand i put it on social media, >> and i put it on social media, my mum, i'm adopted. my was my mum, i'm adopted. my mum was the most beautiful mum on god's
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earth, she, woman who earth, and she, the woman who had me, gave me away, which was the best thing ever. and hilda was my mum. but i've got to tell you, always did do on you, i always did a do on sundays, at a place called the grapes in liverpool. and a woman used to come with her mother for mother's day, bring the ashes. and it was whisky whisky . and it was whisky for whisky. and it was whisky for whisky. and every monday she'd come back because she was legless and had to come and pick the urn up. >> well, that what a weight. it what to celebrate mother's what a way to celebrate mother's day any thoughts? what a way to celebrate mother's dayyeah,any thoughts? what a way to celebrate mother's dayyeah, obviously1ts? what a way to celebrate mother's dayyeah, obviously i've got >> yeah, obviously i've got to mention mother but mention my mother as well, but i don't children . don't have children. >> i lost a baby last year and so this is for all those women and men because it's devastating for as well, who sadly for partners as well, who sadly are not mothers , wanted to be are not mothers, wanted to be and couldn't be. thoughts are with you , you know, it's so with you, you know, it's so just. that's all i'll say. but my mum is also. no, you're absolute superstar. >> and we've been we've been trying to make that point. mother's day is sometimes a painful some people. oh, painful day for some people. oh, for lots of different reasons. yeah and they should be, we
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should, we should shout out to them as well. >> and such important message. >> and such important message. >> because a mother, i do >> because i was a mother, i do believe i was a mother. it didn't survive. >> are mother. didn't survive. >> and are mother. didn't survive. >> and they, mother. didn't survive. >> and they, mot know, >> and they, you know, they always point, don't >> and they, you know, they alway i've point, don't >> and they, you know, they alway i've got point, don't >> and they, you know, they alway i've got a point, don't >> and they, you know, they alway i've got a dog.1t, don't they? i've got a dog. >> no word a mother >> there's no word for a mother who should a mother and who should be a mother and isn't. exactly. who should be a mother and isn'and exactly. who should be a mother and isn'and interesting with >> and interesting too, with mother's upset mother's day, which really upset me used to say on my me when i used to say on my radio show that, you know, look after your mum. some people say, but we don't have a relationship with mums. but we don't have a relationship witiyeah,mums. but we don't have a relationship witiyeah,mknow, that's sad for many. >> is. >> is. >> a brighter outlook with boxt solar sponsors of weather on . gb news. >> hello. good morning. welcome to your latest gb news weather from the met office. it's going to be a cloudy day today. there'll be outbreaks of light rain and still rain and drizzle and it's still a feel for the time of a chilly feel for the time of year too. and looking at the picture for this morning, a lot of cloud across the uk. outbreaks rain across many outbreaks of rain across many areas. just of sunshine areas. just a bit of sunshine towards south—west and that
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towards the south—west and that remains so for the afternoon too. but this could trigger 1 or 2 showers as we move through into the evening time elsewhere. generally it stays cloudy for much of the day, outbreaks of light rain and drizzle and the wind coming in off the wind still coming in off the nonh a wind still coming in off the north a chilly for north sea, so a chilly feel for many of us into the evening time. this rain will continue to push its way westward. still a lot of low cloud behind it. some drizzle in places too, so a damp evening to come and that takes us into monday as well. it remains cloudy through sunday night. further outbreaks of light rain and drizzle in places, some low cloud leading to some foggy conditions over the higher ground and temperatures again falling to around mid single figures due to the cloud cover not falling too low at all, but it does mean another cloudy grey start to monday . outbreaks of rain and monday. outbreaks of rain and drizzle feeding the north drizzle feeding in off the north sea, particularly down these eastern remaining eastern areas, remaining quite damp the day . best damp for much of the day. best of any brighter spells will be towards coast , but even towards western coast, but even here it will remain largely cloudy through the day. some
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showery rain for northern ireland and temperatures ireland too, and temperatures just about getting into double figures. you soon. figures. see you soon. >> looks like things are heating up boxt boilers
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gb news. >> good morning. it's 7:00 on sunday, the 10th of march. it is mother's day today , huge crowds mother's day today, huge crowds gather in london as pro—palestinian protests take to the streets again. but discrepancies in policing is causing controversy . causing controversy. >> princess diana's brother , >> princess diana's brother, charles spencer, claims that he was sexually abused from the age of 11 at his boarding school. >> hollywood's night of nights is tonight is the oscars all of the stars are going to gather to celebrate the best in film. we'll be looking ahead to the likely big winners and talking of big winners , the crufts dog
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of big winners, the crufts dog show has taken over birmingham. >> 200 breeds are all competing for prizes and it is mother's day today. >> happy mother's day, anne. >> happy mother's day, anne. >> thank you. >> thank you. >> do get in touch and tell us how you are celebrating today or if you've got lovely message if you've got a lovely message for your your granny, for your mum or your granny, send and it will our send it in and it will be our honour share this morning. honour to share it this morning. >> absolutely. had some >> absolutely. we've had some lovely thank lovely emails already, so thank you the sport aiden. >> good morning arsenal continued their formidable run of form moving to the top of of form by moving to the top of the premier league with victory over the emirates, over brentford at the emirates, but afternoon it's the but this afternoon it's the really big one. it's liverpool against from against manchester city from anfield . anfield. >> hello there. morning. it >> hello there. good morning. it is a cloudy, damp start for many of us. first thing will it improve at all? will there be some sunshine. find out all the weather details coming up soon. well hello. >> it's lovely to be with you this sunday morning. this mother's day morning. >> i'm anne diamond and i'm ellie this is ellie costello, and this is breakfast news .
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breakfast on gb news. >> i was wondering earlier what you thought of crufts . whether you thought of crufts. whether whether you really like it or not. you do? don't you? >> i really like crufts, but i love dogs. and watching them, it makes me feel uncomfortable. >> some of the where you >> some of the classes where you see ridiculous preening see these ridiculous preening and pampering of dogs are see these ridiculous preening andlook pering of dogs are see these ridiculous preening andlook like1g of dogs are see these ridiculous preening andlook like dogs dogs are see these ridiculous preening andlook like dogs atgs are see these ridiculous preening andlook like dogs at all, are see these ridiculous preening andlook like dogs at all, they'e not look like dogs at all, they just look like, i don't know, barbie dolls or something. it just makes me worry about some of the breeds, that's all. yeah. i mean, i've got a little bichon frise and i like her not looking like. i mean, they do beat on freezes ridiculously. >> they look like tudors, don't they? with big ring of fur they? with the big ring of fur around funny round head and around the funny round head and seeing that. around the funny round head and see this that. around the funny round head and see this is that. around the funny round head and seethis is my that. around the funny round head and seethis is my little1at. around the funny round head and see this is my little doggy. that >> this is my little doggy. that is ellie. yes, she's ellie, she's even ellie on the telly, which is her. you know, i'm sorry, but she. i had her before ieven sorry, but she. i had her before i even knew you . i even knew you. >> and that is ellie. i just love the fact we've known each other for a long time now.
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>> and this is the first time i've found out that i'm named after dog. have we after your dog. well, we have we share the name, but you do share the same name, but you do share the same name, but you do share the same name, but you do share the name. share the same name, but you do shaandie name. share the same name, but you do shaand as name. share the same name, but you do shaand as i name. share the same name, but you do shaand as i say,|ame. share the same name, but you do shaand as i say, she. share the same name, but you do shaand as i say, she even >> and as i say, she even because the first time i showed her a rescue . she's a her off, she's a rescue. she's a rescue. rescue because a rescue. rescue because she is a bit freeze. even they bit on freeze. but even they need sometimes. and so need rescuing sometimes. and so when i first had her, i was on loose women and i took her on to loose women and i took her on to loose to show her off. and loose women to show her off. and so my family call her ellie on the telly. so she and my family call me . call me. >> oh, well, i'm very i have to say, you're both very, very beautiful. oh, and highly intelligent. oh, well . intelligent. oh, well. >> oh, yeah. because ellie is very. >> well, i'm very honoured to share ellie's name. and can we have her up again? because she's just so beautiful. what an absolute sweetheart. >> she's cute and i love the fact we share the same name. >> yeah, you've got two ellie's in now. two. ellie's in your life now. two. ellie's on telly life now. on the telly in your life now. >> know she >> do you know what she was called got no. called before i got her? no. >> was called? called before i got her? no. >> princess? called? called before i got her? no. >> princess? stop called? called before i got her? no. >> princess? stop and d? called before i got her? no. >> princess? stop and i? called before i got her? no. >> princess? stop and i thought, i'm going to change her i'm going to have to change her name. that? because name. change that? because i
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can't taking it a can't go out taking it for a walk calling across walk and calling princess across the but there she the common, can i? but there she is, ellie. is, princess ellie. >> now, i like >> princess ellie. now, i like the of that. maybe we can the sound of that. maybe we can both that as well. both share that name as well. >> yeah , she'll put up a >> well, yeah, she'll put up a fight for it. >> oh, do know could win >> oh, do you know she could win crufts? just beautiful. crufts? she is just beautiful. >> just sitting there looking >> just by sitting there looking cute hungry. cute and always hungry. >> got a lovely temper? >> has she got a lovely temper? a bit like us. >> yes, yes. »- >> yes, yes. >> tummies today >> our tummies today are rumbling so much. >> duet. >> we're doing a duet. >> we're doing a duet. >> yeah, like an >> yes. yeah, we're like an orchestra in here. just. we need to need feeding. to get need feeding. >> we a little >> don't we need a little snack or something, and or something, don't we? an and that's trouble ellie, that's the trouble with ellie, my that when, when i my ellie. is that when, when i get and the house at get up and i leave the house at 315 in the morning, she thinks it's to eat. so she expects it's time to eat. so she expects a meal i go out? a meal before i go out? >> does she? >> yeah. does she? >> yeah. does she? >> we've got. >> we've got. >> i back. >> when i get back. >> when i get back. >> do. >> em- em— >> yeah, we've got a lot in common, myself and ellie. there you know , did you? >> no, but i've enjoyed that this morning. >> message we had >> i love that message we had earlier well from one of our earlier as well from one of our lovely viewers who said that she's not a mother and she doesn't celebrate mother's day from view. but from that point of view. but she's always felt that she's a mother to her pets, and she lost
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tean mother to her pets, and she lost tear, i think. who was a labrador? yeah, not so long ago . labrador? yeah, not so long ago. and so she feels a sense of sadness today because that was and so she feels a sense of sad baby :oday because that was and so she feels a sense of sad baby .day because that was her baby. >> yeah, because to be a dog mummy also a massive mummy is also a massive responsibility . hugely. and they mummy is also a massive resjlike bility . hugely. and they mummy is also a massive resjlike babies,hugely. and they mummy is also a massive resjlike babies, aren't. and they mummy is also a massive resjlike babies, aren't they?they are like babies, aren't they? >> yeah. yes , they are family. >> is ellie your little baby? >> is ellie your little baby? >> how old is she? >> she is. yes. how old is she? >> well that's a difficult one. >> well that's a difficult one. >> yes. so she's she. >> oh yes. so she's she. >> we reckon she was about or >> we reckon she was about 2 or 3 i her. and i realised 3 when i got her. and i realised to i've to my absolute shock that i've had about six years had her for about six years really. , even she really. so she, even though she looks sprightly , looks very young and sprightly, although she has occasionally has trouble with the stairs, yeah , she must be about eight or. >> oh, well, she is beautiful. yeah and i love the fact we share the same name. >> i know, which means you like the ellie? the name ellie? >> because it. >> because you chose which >> because you chose it. which makes me happy. all makes me happy. that's all right. oh. >> nice. oh, well, >> very nice. oh, well, do keep those messages . those messages. >> we're all cuddly and >> oh, we're all cuddly and warm, aren't we? >> sunday, and it's >> this is sunday, and it's mother's it's a great mother's day, so it's a great way it yeah. do keep way to be. it is? yeah. do keep those about your those views coming in about your mother or your granny. and we would many as would love to share as many as we the programme. we can throughout the programme. pictures good if you'd like
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pictures. >> lovely. pictures. >> we ely. pictures. >> we love pictures. >> we love pictures. >> yeah. >> yeah. >> let's get on with >> okay, let's get on with the real and top real news. and our top story this tens of thousands this morning, tens of thousands of demonstrators of pro—palestinian demonstrators have filled the streets of the capital cities again . capital and other cities again. >> well, that's despite the metropolitan police revealing there significant public there were no significant public order disturbances. but it is the the metropolitan the actions of the metropolitan police which are coming under scrutiny today . scrutiny today. >> yes. >> yes. >> and this is interesting because there's a counter protester who displayed a hamas is terrorism placard and he was arrested after protesters turned on him. and it all led to a very large brawl. >> but the police say differently. they say he was arrested for assault before being de—arrested after officers reviewed the footage . reviewed the footage. >> however, after his arrest, he spoke and this is what he had to say. >> he told me, is it a danger for your life and for the people? when they see maybe attacked you? >> and what did your sign say exactly? >> how much is terrorist? this is a yeah . is a yeah. >> no, that was the sign. police. >> and that's what your sign
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said . said. >> i told the police they attacked me and i want to complain. he said, go to police station near your home. >> well, in a statement which was released after his arrest and arrest, the met clarified that the initial arrest was not made in relation to his placard . made in relation to his placard. >> well, let's get the thoughts of former labour adviser kevin maher. very good to see you this morning, kevin. and what did you make of the scenes that we saw yesterday ? yesterday? >> it's very difficult. >> it's very difficult. >> we're going to obviously continue to see, protests about what's going on in gaza because it's obviously the top international issue for many people. we've got lots of international issues at the moment, but but gaza strikes home because of the scenes of civilian suffering, which strikes a chord with so many people around the world. and what we're obviously seeing in london other british cities, london and other british cities, we're seeing replicated across europe across many other
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europe and across many other democratic countries as well. it's very difficult to for it's very, very difficult to for the police, i think, to deal with these situations because you're trying to uphold the law, you're trying to uphold the law, you're trying to uphold the law, you're trying to uphold freedom of speech, even sometimes when that speech is not, necessarily always popular and you're trying to hold the ring between , to hold the ring between, people's freedom of speech, which is a diametric opposites, which is a diametric opposites, which is a diametric opposites, which is exactly what we've seen here with this, with this particular incident, it's very, very difficult for the police, i think, try and hold the ring think, to try and hold the ring on all of this. it's a very on all of this. and it's a very hard that the met has got to hard job that the met has got to do, i think. i think there were six arrests total yesterday. six arrests in total yesterday. out know, tens of out of what, you know, tens of thousands of people on the street, strikes as street, which strikes me as a fairly a fairly kind of modest, kind of problem that they've been dealing with. but it's these particular incidents where people mounting often single people are mounting often single person counter—protests . it's person counter—protests. it's very, very difficult because emotions run, run very , emotions do run, do run very, very high. now, now this gentleman was arrested. i think that's probably slightly excessive with. but that's probably slightly exceshe e with. but that's probably slightly
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exceshe was with. but that's probably slightly exceshe was de—arrestediut that's probably slightly exceshe was de—arrested we've then he was de—arrested we've got this turned de—arrested this morning which, which is i have to say, a new one on me, but it's very, very, it's very, very difficult for police difficult for the police because, ultimately difficult for the police becaustrying ultimately difficult for the police becaustrying to ultimately difficult for the police becaustrying to uphold mately difficult for the police becaustrying to uphold people's you're trying to uphold people's legitimate, entirely legitimate freedom of speech on both sides of what is , you know, a very, of what is, you know, a very, very tense, zero sum equation between if you're on the side of palestinians and if you're on the side of the israeli state, and both have got powerful arguments, both have got legitimate arguments. but of course, when these play out on the streets of london, it's left to the poor met to try and to the poor old met to try and make of it all. make sense of it all. >> absolutely. it's really difficult, saying, difficult, as you were saying, de—arrested difficult, as you were saying, de—athatad difficult, as you were saying, de—athat was quite new to me word that was quite new to me too. and also everything gets filmed. everything gets filmed. kevin. we'll leave it there because it's going because i know it's going to happen and again, happen again and again, and we'll it the we'll talk about it in the future. thank very much future. but thank you very much for so early in the forjoining us so early in the morning sunday. you . morning on a sunday. thank you. >> now to royal news now. and earl the brother of earl spencer, the brother of princess diana, has revealed that he was sexually abused as a
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child at boarding school. >> in lecture , an extract >> in a lecture, an extract rather of his soon to be released memoir, it's been serialised in the mail on sunday. today, earl spencer reveals that he was targeted by a female member of staff at maidwell hall in northamptonshire in the 70s. >> well now, of course, he is 59 years old and earl spencer alleges that the abuse began when he was just 11. in a statement , the school has said statement, the school has said it is difficult to read about practices which were sadly sometimes believed to be normal and acceptable at the time. almost every facet of school life has evolved significantly since the 1970s. at the heart of the changes is the safeguarding of children and promotion of their welfare. >> it's a very interesting statement, isn't it? it is because it doesn't deny . it because it doesn't deny. it doesn't immediately leap to their own defence and say, this could never have happened. and all the rest of it more or all the rest of it, it more or less acknowledges , and certainly less acknowledges, and certainly the point needs made, that the point needs to be made, that apparently , earl spencer has apparently, earl spencer has done his own investigations and
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has come across many of his contemporaries from the time who tell the same story. shocking isn't tell the same story. shocking isn'oh, deplorable . >> oh, deplorable. >> oh, deplorable. >> let's join the former royal correspondent at the sun charles rae charles, a very good morning to you. it's a very , very to you. it's a very, very difficult read, isn't it? and it explains a lot about, a man who admits himself in this memoir has been scarred for life from the age of 11. >> yeah, well, good morning, ladies. it is a completely shocking read. this morning, i was i was quite shocked myself when i read it. i was even more shocked in the, middle hall, which is the school statement that ellie has just read out, and they seem to be saying that, not just earl spencer, but actually former pupils , were actually former pupils, were making these sort of allegations against, various, matrons and masters at, at the time. i also find it very strange that this they think that that these
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practices which were sadly sometimes believed to be normal and acceptable. well they're not normal and acceptable in my life at any stage , you know, even in at any stage, you know, even in the 70s or even when i was at school, we never got treated like that. and i went to a school in glasgow they school in glasgow where they used towers discipline , used the towers to, discipline, but this, this is, really dreadful . i but this, this is, really dreadful. i mean, he names two teachers, one the headmaster, john porch, and one the latin master, who's a former high sheriff of kent, henry maude, both of whom have since died. he does not name the assistant matron, though, who, came into his dormitory at night. and not just him, but other boys and sexually abused them. now he doesn't know what's happened to this matron. she. he believes she's in her late 60s and could still be alive somewhere, married . and, i would have married. and, i would have thought that he should be giving the name of that lady over to the name of that lady over to the police, and they should be making , the police, and they should be making, investigations and maybe
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prosecutions on a historic basis, so it really is dreadful. and you're absolutely right. and this explains an awful lot about the spencer family itself . it the spencer family itself. it was a complicated family, given we know what happened with the princess of wales and her bulimia and everything else , he bulimia and everything else, he seems suffered the same seems to have suffered the same way. one thing that does stand out for though , i find very, out for me, though, i find very, very strange after this, he's aged 12. he goes to italy with his mother and stepfather and has , sex with a prostitute. has, sex with a prostitute. where were his mother and father when this was going on? i understand that, you know, he was mentally scarred and everything else, but that doesn't sound right to me. no, no , no, but you can. no, no, but you can. >> you can say that. where was his mother throughout his childhood? because those those spencer children had a tough childhood. and i know that sounds extraordinary because they were very, very wealthy and
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aristocratic and everything, but their mother left, left them. their father , by all accounts, their father, by all accounts, was not exactly the kindest man in the world. and, and they and he makes the point in this memoir that he had no sense of intimacy from an older mother figure, all through his childhood. and then to go to a to be sent to a school where he was actually abused by a woman is just it starts to i don't know if you've read the bit where he said in the end, much later in life , he went to later in life, he went to a therapist and talked through the whole thing , and he said, you whole thing, and he said, you know, what am i suffering from? why suffering in this way? why am i suffering in this way? and the therapist frankly, and the therapist said, frankly, my is this you had my diagnosis is this you had a thoroughly messed up childhood . thoroughly messed up childhood. sure. and he didn't use the word messed. he used a much stronger word . and you can't help but word. and you can't help but have real sympathy . have real sympathy. >> but he also he also says that at the age of nine, when he was sent to this school, he, he thought he'd been was being
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thought he'd been he was being sent there because he, he hadn't lived being a good son for lived up to being a good son for his, for his family. so he's got that. but, you know, the spencer family has always been a very, awkward family , in the sense awkward family, in the sense that you're right, mother left at an early age. dad? who wasn't? you know, the greatest father in the world. and you then bring in raine spencer, who was his stepmother , and that was his stepmother, and that relationship with her and the four children, wasn't wasn't great at at times, was not great at all, look, in happier news, shall we reflect on prince edward's birthday? he's turning 60, isn't he? and there have been some beautiful words exchanged between himself and sophie this week . sophie this week. >> yeah. i mean, we have to remember, though, of all the royal children, he's the only one whose marriage appears to have worked. i mean, they seem to be a very happy couple, you know, on very know, they get on very, very well. it's a fantastic
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well. and it's a fantastic picture that's released this morning , you morning of him sitting, you know, on a on a on a wall with his three, with these three dogs, i think it's one's, a labrador called teal, a cocker spaniel with mole and a puppy. teasel, which you can just see in the background hasn't quite grasped the, the, the idea of sitting nearby. but there is another picture of edward with teal in his hands and everything else. great, great picture . and else. great, great picture. and to mark the occasion, the king, his brother , has made him his brother, has made him a member of the order of the thistle, which is the highest, order in scotland. bear in mind , order in scotland. bear in mind, he's now the duke of edinburgh and is filling that role very well. and of course, he and sophie have become quite key members of the royal family. now, in the light of the various illnesses that have happened with the king's cancer and catherine's, surgery. so they are very heavily involved in getting on with, with life. and they've always been like that. it's not been almost like that. they've both been controversial
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characters. many many years ago. but they have turned the corner and doing very , very and they're doing very, very well and they're doing very, very welyeah, they really and >> yeah, they really are. and they've got especially sophie, i suppose, but it's obviously rubbed off on on edward and the children, but they've got a bit of a common touch haven't they. i mean, after the duke of edinburgh died, the former duke of edinburgh prince of edinburgh died. prince philip, bothered to come out philip, she bothered to come out and to people outside and talk to people outside windsor and she, she windsor castle and she, she didn't just use those clipped royal phrases . she actually royal phrases. she actually spoke to people and told them what those last moments were like. and was lovely to hean >> but she's she's always been, you know, a down to earth lady. she's a what, you know, she wasn't always a member of the royal family. she's actually worked by herself, ran her own company. successfully. all company. not successfully. all the time, but not too bad, the time, but not not too bad, and she's. she knows very and so she's. she knows very well what what it's like to be, you know , a member of the of the you know, a member of the of the people. if you like, so, and it's very nice to see them, you
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know, being key members of the royal family rather than just extras, no, that that's a really, really good point, actually, charles, i was just thinking the same thing myself. thank you very much. really good to this morning. what? to see you this morning. what? charles? there is charles? just saying. there is actually important, isn't actually so important, isn't it? because not royal. because sophie is not royal. >> she's married in used catherine neither is camilla. >> catherine. >> catherine. >> the three women absolutely keeping the royal family going at the moment. >> absolutely. >> absolutely. >> and they're commoners , if you >> and they're commoners, if you like. use that word, >> and they're commoners, if you like that's use that word, >> and they're commoners, if you like that's what;e that word, >> and they're commoners, if you like that's what they ll word, >> and they're commoners, if you like that's what they would, >> and they're commoners, if you like that's what they would have but that's what they would have used , they must a little used, they must have a little club get. club they get. >> yeah. they just get it, >> yeah. and they just get it, don't they? they get what's needed get on needed of them and they get on with it. and yeah, hats with it. yeah. and yeah, hats off them . and happy mother's off to them. and happy mother's day to all of them. yes absolutely . and it's so lovely absolutely. and it's so lovely isn't it, to see the affection between sophie and, and edward and children well. and their children as well. >> they brought >> lovely. when they brought the children well. their children out as well. their children out as well. their children behave with children knew how to behave with ordinary members of the public. >> lady louise. >> lady louise. >> yeah, and well, to find out the other ones.
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>> but anyway, they're lovely family, too. yeah. >> viscounts. >> viscounts. >> is. yeah. very >> i think he is. yeah. very good. that don't know. >> i think he is. yeah. very goothe that don't know. >> i think he is. yeah. very goothe name hat don't know. >> i think he is. yeah. very goothe name isn't don't know. >> i think he is. yeah. very goothe name isn't it?ion't know. >> the name isn't it? >> the name isn't it? >> lovely to, lovely see >> but lovely to, lovely to see the affection them. it's the affection between them. it's very isn't it? very human, isn't it? >> yes, absolutely. >> yes, absolutely. >> 7:18. let's take a look >> now, 7:18. let's take a look at some other stories coming into newsroom. at some other stories coming inthell newsroom. at some other stories coming inthell ,ewsroom. at some other stories coming inthell , the �*oom. at some other stories coming inthell , the ministry of defence >> well, the ministry of defence has confirmed a fire has confirmed reports of a fire on board its flagship aircraft carrier, the hms queen elizabeth. the royal navy vessel is currently docked at glen mallan in scotland, and the mod has said that the fire was quickly brought under control and no reported injuries , as and no reported injuries, as united states military ship is headed towards the middle east carrying aid equipment to build a temporary pier off the coast of gaza , president biden has of gaza, president biden has confirmed the us would build a floating pier to get aid to gaza by sea, after aid deliveries by land and air have proved difficult and sometimes dangerous, and humberside police have removed a number of bodies from the premises of a funeral.
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directors in hull after reports of concern for care of the deceased. cordons are in place at three branches of legacy independent funeral directors in east yorkshire, and they're investigating whether any criminal offences might have been committed . that last story been committed. that last story very, very concerning, very, very, very concerning, very, very concerning. >> and if we get any more information on that, of course we'll bring that to you this morning on breakfast. we morning on breakfast. should we take the weather? take a look at the weather? >> over to greg >> yes. 720 over to greg dewhurst . dewhurst. >> hello. good morning. welcome to your latest gb news weather from the met office. it's going to be a cloudy day today. there'll be outbreaks of light rain and drizzle, and it's still a chilly feel for the time of year two. and looking at the picture for this morning, a lot of across the uk. of cloud across the uk. outbreaks of rain across many areas. just of sunshine areas. just a bit of sunshine towards the southwest. and that
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remains so afternoon remains so for the afternoon too. but this could trigger 1 or 2 showers as we move through into the evening time elsewhere. generally, it stays cloudy for much of the day, outbreaks of light rain and drizzle and the wind still coming in off the nonh a wind still coming in off the north a chilly feel for north sea, so a chilly feel for many of us into the evening time this rain will continue to push its way westward. still a lot of low cloud behind it. some drizzle in places too, so a damp evening to come and that takes us into monday as well . it us into monday as well. it remains cloudy through sunday night. further of night. further outbreaks of light rain and drizzle in places, some low cloud leading to some foggy conditions over the higher ground and temperatures again falling to around mid. single figures due to cloud cover not falling to the cloud cover not falling too low at all, but it does mean another cloudy grey start to monday. outbreaks of rain and drizzle off the north drizzle feeding in off the north sea, particularly down these eastern areas, quite eastern areas, remaining quite damp for much of the day. best of any brighter spells will be towards western coast, but even here will remain largely
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here it will remain largely cloudy through the day. some showery for northern showery rain for northern ireland two and temperatures just into double just about getting into double figures. see you soon. >> thanks , greg. >> thanks, greg. >> thanks, greg. >> thanks, greg. >> thank you. and now here's your chance to enter our late our latest rather great british giveaway. and you could win £12,345 in cash and a whole host of seasonal treats . of seasonal treats. >> we have a ton of top prizes to won be in our spring giveaway. there's a massive £12,345 in tax free cash to spend however you like, along with £500 in shopping vouchers for your favourite store, a games console, a pizza oven and a portable sonos smart speaker. and the best news? you could be our next big winner. just like phil, you, whoever wins it next is going to be as happy as i was, and they're going to get even more money this time round, so you the so why wouldn't you go in the draw chance the draw for your chance to win the vouchers? treats and £12,345 vouchers? the treats and £12,345 in cash. vouchers? the treats and £12,345 in cash . text gb win to in tax free cash. text gb win to 84 902. text cost £2 plus one
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standard network rate message or post your name and number to gb zero three, po box 8690. derby de19 double tee uk only entrants must be 18 or over. lines close at 5 pm. on friday. the 29th of march. for full terms and privacy notice at gbnews.com forward slash win, please check the closing time if watching or listening demand. good luck . listening on demand. good luck. >> very old prince. i'm talking about prince edward 60. i'm you know, because he's always been the youngest of the four children. and i've always thought of him, you know , i thought of him, you know, i think he's very young. old. >> do you think i had the opposite reaction? i thought, yeah, that's very young. >> he looks good on it, though, doesn't he? >> doesn't he? » m doesn't he? >> do. they both do. >> yeah, they do. they both do. >> yeah, they do. they both do. >> look great do we >> they look great is what do we know his son's name. know what. his son's name. >> no. let's work out. >> oh, no. let's work that out. >> oh, no. let's work that out. >> yeah. >> yeah. >> oh, wait. hang on. >> oh, wait. hang on. >> we need to find you >> we need to find this for you after the break. >> while we google >> hold on while we google something. live news. james, earl of wessex. >> james, earl of wessex. >> james, earl of wessex. >> of wessex. it. james >> i'd know his face. we'd know his face, wouldn't we? yeah. oh,
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james. alexander philip theo mountbatten—windsor, james. alexander philip theo mountbefull—windsor, james. alexander philip theo mountbefull title. isor, wessex. full title. >> wow . now you know. you learn >> wow. now you know. you learn something. watching gb news, right? do stick with us. still to come as the crufts dog show gets underway in birmingham, we have special surprise guest to have a special surprise guest to join us the studio. so hang join us in the studio. so hang on
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>> welcome back. you're watching and listening to breakfast with anna. nelly and ellie is now put on her dog voice. yes. which is irritating . one of those voices. irritating. one of those voices. >> hello, darling . hello. >> hello, darling. hello. >> hello, darling. hello. >> we're going to be talking to this particular. oh, look, are the most gorgeous young man eve r. >> even >> darling, you see what i mean by ellie's voice? i know, darling, i know . darling, i know. >> okay, well, look, while they get to know each other, let me just tell you that crufts is starting today. and it's based in birmingham nowadays, and it's already attracting thousands and
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thousands of people and their beloved dogs to the city. >> yes, more than 200 breeds are competing to be the best on the show and claim the top prize. well, midlands reporter well, our west midlands reporter , jack carson has been along to find exactly what makes find out exactly what makes a winner tonight. >> so every dog has its day. and for the pooches entering crufts, they'll be hoping this is their yean they'll be hoping this is their year. there's been over 24,000 dogsin year. there's been over 24,000 dogs in attendance, and from the 222 different breeds all gunning for best in show, only one can be the winner . as bill lambert be the winner. as bill lambert from the kennel club explains, it's a best of breed of all those dogs that have gone through a number of competitions to reach the final seven. >> so on sunday night on channel 4, you'll see the seven best dogs crufts competing for dogs at crufts competing for best in show. they're looking at the its breed , the best dog of its breed, comparing it with all the other dogs its breed. and that dogs of its breed. and it's that dogs of its breed. and it's that dog extra little dog that has that extra little bit quality, the dog bit of star quality, the dog that performs on the day. that really performs on the day. so just little so it's just that little bit extra the has over the extra that the dog has over the other competitors. >> been awarded
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>> best in show has been awarded for 85 years, and the cocker spaniel has won title seven spaniel has won the title seven times, more than any other breed. but from the best of british to something a little more continental. last year it was the lagotto romagnolo which won the star prize , a success won the star prize, a success which brought with it a huge uptake in demand . sharon martin uptake in demand. sharon martin is from the lagotto romagnolo club. >> they only came into the uk in the 19 mid 1990s, so there's very few breeders. generally you will have to go on a waiting list for probably a year or so, but when you get a surge in demand like that, you then worry about people going abroad and importing dogs that haven't been held tested like we do in the uk i >> -- >> we are a nation of dog lovers with around 12 million pups in 30% of households in the uk . but 30% of households in the uk. but what makes people come back to crufts year after year are dogs. >> there's just so many dogs. what's not to like ? what's not to like? >> it is huge. yeah, so it's such an honour to be here. honestly. like obviously there's so different breeds, so
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so many different breeds, so many people and many different people here. and to everybody with their to watch everybody with their dogs, loves dogs. >> it's the biggest dog show in the world. >> it's hype. ijust the world. >> it's hype. i just love it >> it's the hype. i just love it here. i love being in this atmosphere. nice to atmosphere. it's really nice to be here. >> from agility to routines and of course best in show. crufts has got the wag of approval once again. jack carson gb news birmingham . birmingham. >> well, if you're a dog lover, you're going to have a wonderful time watching crufts and ellie has fallen in love. >> as you can see, this is taro, the most beautiful dog in the world, a red labrador, correct . world, a red labrador, correct. >> red labrador. >> red labrador. >> joining us now is dog trainer and owner of master dog london, robin james and lovely who robin james and lovely taro, who wants involved as well. wants to get involved as well. what do you make of crufts , what do you make of crufts, robin? because anne was saying this morning, weren't you that you're not a particularly big fan of it? >> well, i like that look >> well, i like dogs that look like yeah, don't like like dogs. yeah, i don't like dogs. does do this, dogs. and crufts does do this, that are just poshed and preened as though they were sort of barbie . i don't like that. barbie dolls. i don't like that. >> that's right
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>> yeah, yeah, that's right tony, i think what what crufts shows is the standard for dogs. so there's always got to be a standard that you know, we follow. otherwise they'd look very, different. and when very, very different. and when the people who show their dogs, they're very particular type they're a very particular type of breeder who wants to breed the best standard and then go on to win crufts best in show , to win crufts best in show, ideally, so they want their dogs to be very preened. but, you know, in the real world they're not really like that. it's just pre crufts. >> it's just the crufts look i suppose it's just the crop. >> they want them to look their best. than best. best. in fact better than best. >> the dogs enjoy >> how much the dogs enjoy elements of crafts you know like agility. you sometimes see the dogs released off dogs and they're released off their and they oh their leads and they are oh they're excited . they're loving it. so excited. and they bound into it. it looks as some of them as though some of them really enjoy it. >> i think they like agility , >> i think they like agility, the dogs to be covered in dog. they do enjoy it. you can see as they run through the race that their tails are wagging. you know, particular dogs love a job
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and utility dogs are certainly job. you know, that's a job for them. yes to move around. >> so does that depend on the breed? i suppose, because some dogs are a little bit lazier than others . than others. >> i don't think the lazier dogs would be used so much as far as agility or crufts would be concerned . but, yeah. listen, concerned. but, yeah. listen, a certain dogs like this dog here would not be very talkative . dog would not be very talkative. dog wouldn't be very good, very talkative. but there'd be people who would disagree with me who who would disagree with me who who would disagree with me who who would up their who would train up their labrador to be amazing at agility, but labradors in general are quite, quite a relaxed breed, i think. >> let's go back to you, robin. there you are. >> because what you do with with your company and all your expertise is you, you train dogs for people, don't you? >> correct. i usually find dogs for people. so they ask me to go out and find a certain breed. >> so ellie wants to know whether or not, taro is already spoken whether or not, taro is already spo unfortunately , taro is
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>> unfortunately, taro is already spoken for by a lovely gentleman tito taro. gentleman called tito taro. >> you've broken my heart, i love you. >> he is a heartbreaker. he is. he definitely is a heartbreaker. and the colour is amazing. >> you were saying about the colour. you that colour. where you think that might come? >> it maybe come from >> i think it maybe come from like setter in with like a red setter mixed in with the labrador, know, because the labrador, you know, because the labrador, you know, because the been around , i the breed has been around, i think labradors from the late 70005, think labradors from the late 7000s, early 1800s probably. >> oh, and how does the interbreeding make you feel? because, i mean, we were talking about that this morning, weren't you? especially those dogs. you can see with the really squashed up they have up noses. and then they have difficulties with breathing. i can barely walk. it so cruel, can barely walk. it is so cruel, isn't it? >> i think into breeding, i think actually what i really think actually what i really think is dna testing. so if every breeder dna tested their dogs before breeding them within a couple of decades, we'd have none of this disease within
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dogs. right? so dna testing, we can just test over 200 markers, and that's the future. really for the health of dogs and not interbreed . interbreed. >> well, i do know that. i mean spokes various spokesman for crufts over the years have said that's what they're trying to look than the just the look at more than the just the image the perfect looking image of the perfect looking dog. to go for, dog. they want to go for, healthy dogs, absolutely healthy dogs, ethical breeders, and dogs that have long life. >> and we were just talking before and before about, you know, there's a company in america now , that actually uses america now, that actually uses drugs to almost double the life of a dog's life. yeah. which is amazing . so they're using stem amazing. so they're using stem cell technology, and they're actually doubling the age of a dog because i think the record is 27 years. but dogs used to live for like 15, 16 years. that was the norm. and now it's sort of like 1012. and with some dogs 6 to 8. >> yeah. and why would that be? >> yeah. and why would that be? >> just because they're, they're
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they've got problems interbred. >> disease and >> we've we've disease and problems which then are recurring and recurring unless we do the dna testing is going to carry on. so dna, dna testing is the future for healthy dogs that live longer. >> and talking of, tarot there you've had him, what, 3 or 4 days? yes. how long will you keep him? until you consider him properly trained? >> he will stay with me for ten days, i'm going to go back to mummy. come back to me. he will stay with me for ten days on puppy stay with me for ten days on puppy boot camp. most dogs stay 10 14 and in that time 10 to 14 days. and in that time i will toilet train him. i will obedience train him , but i will obedience train him, but i will make him soft, kind and gentle. so bringing out his really good attributes, building up his confidence , his trust to make confidence, his trust to make him independent. how many puppies have you bootstrapped up until now? >> do you keep hundreds and hundreds? >> if not into the thousands now i think, oh, i've certainly, you know, high hundreds , i've been
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know, high hundreds, i've been doing it for ten years now. so you know, it really has sort of like, no. >> well, i was going to ask how difficult it must be to give them back to their owners , but i them back to their owners, but i don't think you're going to have the with this one. the chance with with this one. he's staying. >> he's staying with me. he's staying. >> robin he's staying with me. he's staying. >> robin keeper. iying with me. >> robin keeper. >> robin keeper. >> he's a keeper. thank >> right. he's a keeper. thank you for bringing in. you so much for bringing him in. you've ellie's day. >> yeah. thanks, robin. fantastic. you'll fantastic. and, terry, you'll stay yeah. stay with us? yeah. >> can just stay with us. >> you can just stay with us. >> you can just stay with us. >> rightarrow. >> rightarrow. >> see you later. >> rightarrow. >> say you later. >> rightarrow. >> say bye later. >> rightarrow. >> say bye to :er. >> rightarrow. >> say bye to everybody. thanks, robin. >> say bye to everybody. thanks, robirthink time for us to >> i think it's time for us to take we'll be back with take a break. we'll be back with you couple moments. you in just a couple of moments. >> oh
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i >> -- >> brand new sundays from 6 pm. the neil oliver show. it's absolutely vital that people are given the opportunity to take part in the debate. >> to say the things that matter to them, to be challenged . a to them, to be challenged. a country only really a shared country is only really a shared dream , as long as enough people dream, as long as enough people have a shared idea of what it
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is, then that country exists. what gb news does is give voices somewhere they can be heard. the neal of a show sundays from 6 pm. on . gb pm. on. gb news. >> hello again. welcome back and happy mother's day and we do appreciate that for some people it's a wonderful day. you're looking forward to seeing your children or they're really looking to seeing you on looking forward to seeing you on other sorry. on other other days. sorry. on other for other days. sorry. on other for other , it can be very, other people, it can be very, very poignant and sad if you want it to be a mother and maybe never could be. or if you've lost steve says. our lost a mother. steve says. our mum, anna blackwell, was buried on friday, march the 1st. so it's very raw for you, isn't it? today the family will meet at her grave to toast mother's day with her favourite tipple, baileys. oh, happy day , mumsy. >> oh, that is so lovely. and, steve, thinking of you and the family today, gavin says please wish rita a happy
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wish my mum rita a happy mother's day. she passed away seven years ago. was seven years ago. she was a wonderful mum to me and a wonderful mum to me and a wonderful aunt to my cousin bev. keep up the good work ladies, says gavin. >> thank you. joanne says >> thank you. and joanne says it's particularly day it's a particularly poignant day for adoptee. i've lost for me as an adoptee. i've lost two mothers. i'm sure i'm not alone in finding the day quite challenging. >> yeah, i'm sure many people do find it a very difficult . and find it a very difficult. and linda says happy mother's day to everyone today . to all everyone in the uk today. to all you mums i hope you are spoilt rotten and big shout out to rotten and a big shout out to those have lost a child, those who have lost a child, which a position to be which is a hard position to be in, you will get stronger. a big hug to you all. that's a really lovely message, isn't it? get in touch. >> tell us how you're feeling today and give a chance to today and give us a chance to help give a shout out to a help you give a shout out to a mother, that you've loved mother, maybe that you've loved or still loving, and you're or you still loving, and you're going a fuss of going to make a big fuss of today. we will give today. yeah, we will give a shout out to them if you get in touch the usual way. vaiews@gbnews.com. >> let's through the sports, >> let's go through the sports, shall with aiden who is shall we? now with aiden who is here with us. >> good morning. see again. >> good morning. see you again. good today on good morning. all eyes today on manchester city against liverpool.
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>> big big match this one. >> big big match this one. >> absolutely. i'll tell you something . this is interesting. something. this is interesting. you like like this you were like you're like this £60 a ticket. that's what it £60 for a ticket. that's what it normally face value for normally costs at face value for the lower tier. and it the stand behind the dugout . so it's the behind the dugout. so it's the it's the viewpoint. you to it's the viewpoint. you get to see managers . it's probably see both managers. it's probably going to be last time. could see both managers. it's probably be they face each be the last time they face each other. two titans of the premier league think jurgen league era. i still think jurgen klopp's in him, klopp's got anotherjob in him, so. could be the last so. but it could be the last time today. time they face each other today. how on the how much do you think on the black are going black market tickets are going for £60? can i for given they cost £60? can i have a guess both of you? have a guess from both of you? >> 2000 was going to say >> 2000 00! was going to say 200. no >> 200. n0 >> well, i'm bidding high. >> well, i'm bidding high. >> papers, one of the >> well the papers, one of the tabloids morning reckons tabloids this morning reckons it's going for. it's £6,500. they're going for. >> . >> my goodness. >> my goodness. >> well, you would, wouldn't you? >> if you were, i wouldn't. big deal >> if you were, i wouldn't. big deal, fan, would you. >> you would pay if you >> you would pay that if you were big deal fan. this were a really big deal fan. this is match. is a big match. >> it's the biggest game in world the moment, world football at the moment, i would argue bigger world football at the moment, i woulthe argue bigger world football at the moment, i woulthe clasico argue bigger world football at the moment, i woulthe clasico in argue bigger world football at the moment, i woulthe clasico in spain. bigger world football at the moment, i woulthe clasico in spain. ifjger than the clasico in spain. if they draw arsenal stay top of they draw arsenal stay top of the they went top the league. they went top yesterday two one yesterday by winning two one against now this was against brentford. now this was interesting because the england
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goalkeeper, aaron ramsdale, stepped game. was stepped in for one game. he was discarded at the start of the season. made a horrific season. he made a horrific mistake kind of mistake yesterday, kind of justifying he justifying the wrath. was he doing? you it ? doing? oh no. did you see it? >> fryston. he suggested question. >> yeah. what on earth are you doing? >> i was impressed then. >> i was impressed then. >> i was impressed then. >> i really thought you must have watched. yeah, i thought so as well. did it happen? >> well, he just he got closed down. a simple simple down. it was a simple a simple clearance. in, clearance. and visser got in, got touch with him, so he got got in touch with him, so he got in touch with him. he did kind of get in touch me. got in of get in touch with me. got in front sorry. and front of him. sorry. and diverted into the net. diverted the ball into the net. ricocheted him. and was ricocheted off him. and he was but arsenal dressing but but the arsenal dressing room half room rallied around him at half time look, let's win time and said look, let's win this the goalkeeper. this game for the goalkeeper. and of justified and it kind of justified arteta's last summer arteta's decision last summer to discard him, because if you get one a one opportunity to come in for a league game you fluff your league game and you fluff your lines in that spectacular way, then know kind of you then you know you kind of you kind of think, well, maybe the manager right. he manager got it, got it right. he doesn't many decisions doesn't get too many decisions wrong doesn't get too many decisions wrowhat time on? >> what time is it on? >> what time is it on? >> it's peculiar kick off >> it's on a peculiar kick off time, a normally it'd be time, a 3:45. normally it'd be 430. i don't really know if there's a reason for that. it
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could be mother's day related. there's a reason for that. it cou|note mother's day related. there's a reason for that. it cou|not sure, her's day related. there's a reason for that. it cou|not sure, her's datottenham i'm not sure, but. so tottenham play i'm not sure, but. so tottenham play as well . play aston villa today as well. big game in the race for the for the top four. united won the top four. man united won yesterday. palace yesterday. crystal palace and luton some good luton drew. so we saw some good action yesterday . but as i say action yesterday. but as i say today's match huge. global today's match huge. the global audience for that is probably not that far off. what you get for bowl. for the super bowl. >> yeah. yes okay. >> yeah. well yes okay. >> yeah. well yes okay. >> very quickly talk >> very very quickly we talk about the essex boy please. >> grand prix 18 year old oliver bell. >> what extraordinary story. >> what an extraordinary story. he was 11th qualifying on the he was 11th in qualifying on the thursday. it was . and thursday. i think it was. and the saudi grand prix happened yesterday. from yesterday. carlos sanz from ferrari was unable to compete because of appendicitis and the 18 year old oliver bearman, from chelmsford, stepped in and finished seventh ahead of lando norris and lewis hamilton. max verstappen, who won it and that was very boring . so he always was very boring. so he always wins, he said very, very impressive. and i'll tell you what, this is one. this guy is one for the future. >> one to watch. >> it's one to watch. >> it's one to watch. >> years old? >> isn't he 18 years old? >> isn't he 18 years old? >> what he'll be capable. >> you imagine how excited, how much insurance. much of an insurance. >> his insurance >> how much is his insurance going that car? i
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going to be on that car? i didn't my provisional didn't get my provisional license i was license until i was 29. >> has he been driving for? >> what mean. for? >> that's what i mean. well, you can circuits age can drive on circuits at any age , can't you? >> you? >> can you? >> can you? >> i know that, don't you? >> yeah, i know that, don't you? yes. >> one circuit. oh, there you go. >> you're on private reg. >> you're on private reg. >> can drive and access >> you can drive and got access to cars, you see. to these fast cars, you see. >> across it. yeah. okay >> hands across it. yeah. okay >> hands across it. yeah. okay >> absolutely >> but extraordinary. absolutely extraordinary. >> but extraordinary. absolutely extraordinarto hear we're going to hear a lot of i think in the next few years. >> great. >> great. >> very >> great. >>very >> great. >> very he's an essex >> very good. and he's an essex boy well. one of one of mine. boy as well. one of one of mine. >> own. >> i was my own. >> that's all right then . >> that's all right then. >> that's all right then. >> is good >> is it good egg. >> is it good egg. >> through the >> we'll be going through the papers a couple papers in just a couple of moments, go anywhere.
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>> good morning. welcome back. you are watching and listening to breakfast with ellie and anne. and we're going through the papers now with personal finance and consumer affairs commentator frost and commentator georgie frost and broadcaster pete price. very good morning both of you. and good morning to both of you. and i will put this to both of you,
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but i will start with you. pete, this is a, well, a very distressing article, isn't it, as part of earl spencer's memoir, where he alleges he was sexually abused at age 11 at boarding school and also horrifically beaten as well. >> yeah, what what is sad about it is i just negative for one side. i'm sad he's come up with it now . he's written a book it now. he's written a book because it will sell books because it will sell books because that's the headline. so let's get that out of the way . let's get that out of the way. i'm a different generation to you three beautiful ladies. and in my school we were beaten mercilessly all the time. came i'd, get kneed in the leg. had, blackboard dusters thrown at us. it was a different world. sadly but to be abused is unrwa real. and i wonder how much, because people will read the story and go. that happened to me . oh my
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go. that happened to me. oh my word. because it was a different world. there was nothing in place to know about paedophiles and i think it's tragic, but a little bit sad that it's now has come out well. >> it's taken him this long to actually come to terms with it and to go to a therapist and talk through it and feel strong enough and brave enough to, to write about it because he's come across contemporaries of his at the same school who have, absolutely said the same thing happened to me , and it clearly happened to me, and it clearly went on at that school. it's very uncomfortable reading. >> oh, it's desperately uncomfortable. >> and on a personal level, if this is his experience and what he's been through, it's just it's absolutely tragic. you don't want to be reading anything this, but it you anything like this, but it you hear more of these hear more and more of these cases out and it is cases coming out and it is absolutely, deeply disturbing. so as as you rightly said, look , so as as you rightly said, look, if means other people if it means that other people start about their start now talking about their experiences, another experiences, there's another story this morning story in the paper this morning about labour trying to prioritise men's health. suicide is the biggest killer men is the biggest killer of men under you know, i know
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under 50. you know, i know talking about it isn't to talking about it isn't going to resolve any of these issues that you're reading here, but hopefully will help people hopefully it will help people come to terms with the experiences they've been through. >> i mean, what strikes you so much? sorry, when you read this article is just how complex it is and difficult it was for is and how difficult it was for him to unpick, because he even talks about fact that it was talks about the fact that it was abuse a female abuse from a female matron towards boys, and they towards young boys, and they were kind of applauded amongst their peers for getting this attention from this older female. and he said, well, if that was the other way around, it year old male it was a 20 year old male towards year old girls. it towards 11 year old girls. it would very different story. would be a very different story. >> the thing is, and >> the other thing is, and there'll many people watching there'll be many people watching now who've through it, now who've been through it, nobody child three nobody believed a child three years ago. now they believe them. thank goodness . but years them. thank goodness. but years ago nobody believed a child. it was brushed under the carpet. oh, you're you're making it up. you're making it up. so he's also not only been abused , but also not only been abused, but he's gone through all that pain without talking. >> he actually says at one point
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when he used to go home for the holidays. then he was holidays. yeah, and then he was preparing go back to school. holidays. yeah, and then he was prewas1g go back to school. holidays. yeah, and then he was pre was so go back to school. holidays. yeah, and then he was pre was so terrified:k to school. holidays. yeah, and then he was pre was so terrified of to school. holidays. yeah, and then he was prewas so terrified of goingyol. he was so terrified of going back to school that he seriously thought of getting one of his father's shooting father's shotguns and shooting himself in the leg or the foot so that he wouldn't have to go back to school. back to that school. he seriously many seriously considered it many times. and of times. yeah, i mean, and of course, you have to remember, he was the only boy in family. was the only boy in that family. yeah, other children yeah, the other three children were diana were girls, princess diana being one course . and one of them. of course. and their mother wasn't there, so he never real intimate love never got any real intimate love from an older so this book, this book and this article will bring so many painful memories back to so many painful memories back to so many painful memories back to so many people watching. >> now, i think there's also another element of the royal family just taking this a little bit further away from here is what royal must be what the royal family must be thinking another thinking about, kind of another expose time when expose book at a time when there's lot of attention on there's a lot of attention on there's a lot of attention on the royal family and where elements they're elements are and what they're doing i wonder doing at the moment. so i wonder how they will be feeling about this. he's member this. no, but he's not a member of royal and
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of the royal family and actually, you know, it's interesting actually, you know, it's inteiit;ting makes the royal and it also makes the royal family that it happens family human that it happens to them well . them as well. >> and hopefully it helps somebody, you know, just to speak about it so openly, you know , for someone that has know, for someone that has suffered in the same way that, that it gives them some comfort as well. i mean, he's obviously sought therapy and has come to terms with it, but, i mean, i know it wasn't only aristocracy because dickens wrote about such cruelties, didn't they? >> , you know, with >> happening, you know, with people who weren't royal. but the way we in britain treat the way our aristocrats brought up their , gosh. their children, gosh. >> well, it's that culture, isn't and he he writes about isn't it? and he he writes about that actually in the memoir, as it starved of it is being starved of affection. and one the affection. yeah and one of the reasons says that the reasons why he, he says that the boys actually longed for that attention from, this matron attention from, from this matron is because they were so starved of it at home. >> isn't that interesting? you say that. bob monkhouse was say that. and bob monkhouse was a of mine . sadly, we a dear friend of mine. sadly, we lost him, and i always remember bob his mother never said bob saying his mother never said she loved him. oh always stayed
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with me. that forever. on mother's day as well. yeah. happy mother's day, guys. >> yes . >> yes. >> yes. >> absolutely. >> absolutely. >> yeah. >> yeah. >> happy mother's day to all of you. we have got a you. look, we have got a statement the school, which you. look, we have got a sta'd0|ent the school, which you. look, we have got a sta'do have the school, which you. look, we have got a sta'do have to the school, which you. look, we have got a sta'do have to the it 1ool, which you. look, we have got a sta'do have to the it says which you. look, we have got a sta'do have to the it says it1ich we do have to read. it says it is to about is difficult to read about practices which were sadly sometimes normal sometimes believed to be normal and acceptable at the time. almost every facet of school life has evolved significantly since the 1970s. at the heart of the changes is the safeguarding of children and the promotion of their welfare. that's a statement from maidwell hall school there. >> i tell you what, going from something which was schooling all those years ago to something that schooling nowadays pete is a quarter of pupils are now using ai tools to help them do their homework, like chatgpt. >> yep. >> yep. >> everybody's talking about al and the teachers are absolutely paranoid because they don't know what is in place to help them. i mean, i, i, for instance, could say to ai mean, i, i, for instance, could say to a! for my column on
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thursday in the echo, i could say, do me 300 words and it does it in 30s . that's how scary this it in 30s. that's how scary this is. >> i wrote an introduction once to an interview i had to do, and i thought i'd just try it out and said, write it in the and i said, write it in the style daytime television style of a daytime television presenter. brilliant . presenter. and it was brilliant. yeah, i'm sad to say. we'll have to it there. we've run out yeah, i'm sad to say. we'll have to time. it there. we've run out yeah, i'm sad to say. we'll have to time. let'szre. we've run out yeah, i'm sad to say. we'll have to time. let's getwe've run out yeah, i'm sad to say. we'll have to time. let's get on ve run out yeah, i'm sad to say. we'll have to time. let's get on with|n out yeah, i'm sad to say. we'll have to time. let's get on with the it yeah, i'm sad to say. we'll have to time. let's get on with the . weather. >> that warm feeling inside from boxt boilers , sponsors of boxt boilers, sponsors of weather on . gb news. weather on. gb news. >> hello. good morning. welcome to your latest gb news weather from the met office. it's going to be a cloudy day today. there'll be outbreaks of light rain and drizzle, and it's still a chilly feel for the time of year too. and looking at the picture for this morning, a lot of across the uk. of cloud across the uk. outbreaks rain across many outbreaks of rain across many areas. bit sunshine areas. just a bit of sunshine towards the southwest and that remains so for the afternoon too . but this could trigger 1 or 2
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showers as we move through into the evening time elsewhere. generally, it stays cloudy for much of the day, outbreaks of light rain and drizzle and the wind still coming off the wind still coming in off the nonh a wind still coming in off the north a chilly feel for north sea, so a chilly feel for many of us into the evening time this rain will continue to push its way westward. still a lot of low cloud behind it. some drizzle in places too . so a damp drizzle in places too. so a damp evening to come and that takes us into monday as well. it remains cloudy through sunday night. further outbreaks of light rain and drizzle in places, some low cloud leading to some foggy conditions over the higher ground and temperatures again falling to around mid single figures due to the cloud cover not falling too low at all, but it does mean another cloudy grey start to monday. outbreaks rain and monday. outbreaks of rain and drizzle in off the north drizzle feeding in off the north sea, particularly down these eastern remaining quite eastern areas, remaining quite damp for much the day. best damp for much of the day. best of brighter spells will be of any brighter spells will be towards western coast, but even of any brighter spells will be towa its western coast, but even of any brighter spells will be towa it willstern coast, but even of any brighter spells will be towa it will remain ast, but even of any brighter spells will be towa it will remain largely: even here it will remain largely cloudy through the day. some showery rain for northern ireland too, and temperatures just about getting into double
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figures . see just about getting into double figures. see you soon. >> a brighter outlook with boxt solar sponsors of weather on gb news
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discrepancies in the way those marches are being policed is causing controversy . causing controversy. >> princess diana's brother, earl spencer , claims he was earl spencer, claims he was sexually abused from the age of 11 at boarding school . 11 at boarding school. >> hollywood's night of nights it's the oscars and all the stars are already gathering to celebrate the best in film. we'll be looking ahead to the likely big winners.
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>> at 820, we'll be debating whether artificial intelligence could replace the arts amid a rise in new a! music. >> and of course, it's mother's day, so do get in touch with us. tell us how you're celebrating today. tell us about any special mother you want to give a shout out to, and we'll be glad to help. aiden. >> it was a truly thrilling day of upsets in the six nations, with england dramatically beating ireland at twickenham whilst scotland was stunned by italy in rome in the premier league. meanwhile, arsenal went top table but it's all top of the table but it's all eyes on liverpool v manchester city from this afternoon city from anfield this afternoon . more later. city from anfield this afternoon . m hello ten city from anfield this afternoon . m hello there. city from anfield this afternoon . mhello there. good morning . it >> hello there. good morning. it is a cloudy, damp start for many of us. first thing, will it improve at all? will there be some sunshine? find out all the weather details coming up soon. >> great to be with you today. >> great to be with you today. >> i'm anne diamond and i'm ellie costello and this is breakfast on .
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breakfast on. gb news. >> yes. do get in touch about mother's day because we're fully aware that while for some people, it's a very jolly day , people, it's a very jolly day, others it really isn't. it's very poignant. we were talking earlier about the fact that if you wanted to be a mum and never got the chance to or were, you know, i don't know you, it just never happened for you. for whatever reason . it's it can be whatever reason. it's it can be quite a tough day to get through. and of course, it's tough if you've just lost your mum. yes. or even if you haven't just lost your mum because you never forget, and it is a day when you particularly remember , when you particularly remember, and if you're doing any a particular gesture towards a lost mum, maybe, or you're all planning a big lunch or something today. do tell us about it. please. put a smile on our faces as well. yes, but we are also remembering those for whom today is quite tough. >> very difficult. yes. do keep those coming in to us. we'll share as many as we can throughout the programme . gb throughout the programme. gb
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views news. views at gb news. >> now to our top story . >> com now to our top story. this morning, tens of thousands of pro—palestinian demonstrators have streets the have filled the streets of the capital again . capital again. >> well, despite the met police revealing there were no significant public orders disturbances, it is actions disturbances, it is the actions of the metropolitan police which are coming under scrutiny today . are coming under scrutiny today. >> yes, there's this interesting incident of a counter protester who displayed a placard that said hamas is terrorism, and he was arrested after protesters turned on him, leading to a very awful looking brawl. >> well, the police said he was arrested for assault before being de—arrested after officers reviewed the footage. >> however, after his arrest , he >> however, after his arrest, he spoke and this is what he had to say . say. >> he told me, is it a danger for your life and for the people when they see maybe attacked ? when they see maybe attacked? >> and what did your sign say exactly? >> how much is terrorist ? this >> how much is terrorist? this is. yeah. >> no, that was the police. and that's what your sign said. >> i told the police they
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attacked me, and i want to complain. he said go to police station near your home. >> well, let's get the latest now from our political correspondent , katherine correspondent, katherine forster. very good morning to you , catherine. and you were at you, catherine. and you were at this protest yesterday , as you this protest yesterday, as you have been for several weeks for us now on gb news. how did you find the scenes yesterday compared to what you've seen before? so >> yes. good morning. i've been many , many of these protests, many, many of these protests, starting with the first one the weekend following the atrocities on october the 7th, and they are largely peaceful. i was there all day yesterday. what tends to happen is, there's people of all ages, all ethnicities, many thousands of people . as darkness thousands of people. as darkness falls, often that's when you get the few troublemakers, and there's usually a few out to
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make trouble. but yesterday , it make trouble. but yesterday, it finished at the american embassy over the river thames, in vauxhall , and it was all done vauxhall, and it was all done and dusted pretty much by 5:00. you didn't have people gathering, as we've seen before in trafalgar square and setting off flares, etc. so largely peaceful. but of course, you can understand why many people in the jewish community do feel that they can't go into central london on the days of these marches because you have thousands of people, some not many , i have to say, with their many, i have to say, with their faces covered. but you do hear that chant from the river to the sea? now i have to say, you hear it occasionally you tend to hear it occasionally you tend to hear it only once or twice, and then they will stop because of course it is very controversial now, michael gove, the levelling up and communities secretary, is set to unveil a new definition of extremism in the next few
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days. of extremism in the next few days . he's been giving an days. he's been giving an interview and he's basically been saying that he understands that there are good hearted people all, going on these marches. so they're moved by the suffering and they want peace. he says . but it suffering and they want peace. he says. but it may suffering and they want peace. he says . but it may help some of he says. but it may help some of them to question who are organising causing some of these events. i won't go into details now, but we will later. and he's basically saying that some of the groups involved have extremism , extremist views. he's extremism, extremist views. he's also saying that of the chant , also saying that of the chant, he said it's not a call for peace when you're saying from the river to the sea, you're explicitly saying, i want to see the end of israel as a jewish state. the jewish homeland erased. so he is taking a tough stance on that chant. i haven't seen any arrests because of it. i wonder whether there the law might change on that. but let's see. no sign of a ceasefire, of course, in gaza at the moment
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and until we see that, i do think these marches will continue , catherine, thanks very continue, catherine, thanks very much indeed. let's now go to former police detective peter bleksley , peter, how would you. bleksley, peter, how would you. mark. the behaviour, as it were, of the met police yesterday ? of the met police yesterday? marks out of ten. are they doing a good job in difficult circumstances, or could they do better ? better? >> well, the senior leadership of the met will reflect on yesterday. and in the absence of large major disorder, i think they will be patting themselves on the back and saying it was a successful operation. but of course, a lot of public opinion doesn't chime with that because people would like to see robust action taken against those who chant offensive words, who display offensive placards and the like. now, yesterday, of course , mr nayak gordoni, who we course, mr nayak gordoni, who we saw earlier in the clip, was
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arrested after there had been a scuffle and he was soon after de arrested. now de arresting is a fairly recent sort of police tactic that's developed in the last decade or so. but of course that can come in for criticism because people will say, well , because people will say, well, they slapped the handcuffs on and then ask questions later. they will say it's a useful tool because it helps to rapidly de—escalate troublesome situations. >> yeah. i mean, arresting somebody doesn't, undo the fact that he was arrested , filmed on that he was arrested, filmed on camera and all the rest of it. you can't undo that when it's so, obvious and like, you know, filmed by people and put out on various social media. you can't undo it, can you? i completely agree with you on that front. >> and it may be, of course, that mr gordoni, number one has to go to a police station like
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he was told to report the alleged assault on him by protesters yesterday. i sincerely hope mr gordoni does that, and i sincerely hope that the police have retained the footage that we heard they'd reviewed to see if he was indeed the victim of any assault, and it might be interesting in terms of potential damage to reputation alongside physical damage and mental trauma , to see damage and mental trauma, to see if he sues the metropolitan police. so i suspect that this element of that story has got a little bit further to run. >> yeah, i expect so too. peter is a real difficult balance for the police, isn't it? because they have to balance up the right to free speech, the right to protest, and also wanting people, especially jewish people , and especially in the capital, to feel safe in their city. we are expecting in the days ahead, this publication of a new official definition of extreme ism. will that be helpful to the
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police in terms of setting out guidelines on perhaps how to deal with these sorts of instances? >> well, a definition might help, but what would be extremely useful , of course, is extremely useful, of course, is new laws that clearly define particular chants or behaviours as being illegal because the police at the moment spend a bit too much time interpreting the law rather than enforcing it. and this is what is leading to growing discord amongst so many people who want to see these marches. police consistently and robustly. now mr gordon is poster yesterday that he had with him actually was a statement of fact. hamas is terrorism . there's no doubt terrorism. there's no doubt about that whatsoever . and it about that whatsoever. and it was interesting to see that it was interesting to see that it was very swiftly pulled down by some of the protesters yesterday . so will he perhaps have set a
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precedent and empower more people who want to go to these marches and display similar posters to the one that he did yesterday? will we see an increase in that? if we do, then i'm sure the police will be concerned because we might again see an increase in potential for trouble . trouble. >> okay. peter bleksley, very good to see you this morning. thank you so much for your time. >> right. it'sjust coming up to >> right. it's just coming up to 8:11. and i don't know if we're going to have enough energy to stay up all night to watch it, but it's oscars night. stephanie takyiis but it's oscars night. stephanie takyi is with us to tell us all about it. you're right, and you've got stay up. you've got to stay up. >> got to stay up all >> i've got to stay up all night. i would love to be in hollywood right now, i'm hollywood right now, but i'm happy to here. but you're happy to be here. but you're right. an with oscars right. an with the oscars dwindling over the dwindling viewers over the years, last year years, even though last year they had 18.7 million viewers worldwide watching it, they still can't grab the attention of everybody who's not interested in films. but tonight it's going to be on itv from 10:00, so i think they will have
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a bit of a bigger british viewing than normally. >> we've been sort of sky cinema, so sky's had it for the last 20 years and itv have won the rights for it, so they'll be doing bits from the red carpet. >> and also jonathan ross will be hosting from the studios. so i think. >> you ever done the red >> have you ever done the red carpet? >> no, no. once i do the oscars i'm retiring from showbiz. so i'm retiring from showbiz. so i'm like, give it a few more years, then i'm done. >> it be exciting. >> it must be exciting. >> it must be exciting. >> it must be exciting. >> it is exciting because, you know, to the know, when it comes to the oscars, the pinnacle of oscars, it's the pinnacle of achievement a film achievement for a lot of film stars. and also in award season. we've got over 20 nominations today, them we've got over 20 nominations todygoing them we've got over 20 nominations todygoing to them we've got over 20 nominations todygoing to oppenheimer. them we've got over 20 nominations todygoing to oppenheimer. so em are going to oppenheimer. so obviously that's based on the film, the father of the film, on the father of the atomic bomb, it's been atomic bomb, and it's been directed by christopher nolan, who's and if he wins best who's a brit and if he wins best director tonight, it will be his first yeah, his first oscar for, yeah, his first. yeah, first oscar for director. well, that's that's why people are quite shocked. so i do think he will have a good night along with kylie and murphy if he wins best actor. first irish actor to get that award as well, think. robbie.
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award as well, i think. robbie. robert downey jr will also do well as best supporting actor. but thing i like about the but the thing i like about the oscars, sometimes it is a night of upsets . you think something of upsets. you think something like oppenheimer do well, like oppenheimer will do well, yes, then then it can come yes, but then then it can come out of nowhere. >> and an almost unknown film . >> and an almost unknown film. >> and an almost unknown film. >> that film, which we >> well, that film, which we might talking about on, might be talking about later on, is of interest. it's is the zone of interest. so it's a holocaust it's very a holocaust drama and it's very gripping , a holocaust drama and it's very gripping, very a holocaust drama and it's very gripping , very poignant. it's gripping, very poignant. it's done well at the baftas and the golden globes . so i think that's golden globes. so i think that's a card, which might do a wild card, which might do well. i haven't even heard of it. oh my gosh, it's really good. if you and watch it. good. if you go and watch it. it's very poignant and it's done well. >> zone of interest. >> zone of interest. >> yeah. the zone of interest and a lot of these holocaust dramas, war films like last yean dramas, war films like last year, saw all quiet on the year, we saw all quiet on the western not western front. not not many people saw but it done people had saw it, but it done really during the awards really well during the awards season. it's all the members season. so it's all the members and tastes and what and their tastes and what they're to vote for, a they're going to vote for, a bone of contention about they're going to vote for, a bone ofof ntention about they're going to vote for, a bone ofof course.1 about they're going to vote for, a bone ofof course. it'sabout they're going to vote for, a bone ofof course. it's got jl barbie. of course. it's got eight including eight awards, including best film, for margot film, but nothing for margot robbie the director. robbie or the director. >> reason that why wouldn't she be nominated?
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be at least nominated? >> really don't know. i think >> i really don't know. i think the members are quite critical. i think barbie done well, £1.1 billion in the box office. but again, some people just think it's just plastic. >> it's not generally. yeah. on it's not a popularity contest . it's not a popularity contest. yeah. because if it was then you'd probably have barbie winning best film because it was one know, made most one of, you know, made the most money box office. money in the box office. >> and people are saying, >> and what people are saying, you've got this film which is all feminism, but tonight all about feminism, but tonight it's going be ryan it's all going to be about ryan gosling and 65. ken's on gosling and his 65. ken's on stage, and got stage, so and he's got nominations he's best nominations and he's best supporting know , supporting actor. so you know, people saying the whole people are saying the whole theme film hasn't landed theme of the film hasn't landed well awards. well with awards. >> i mean, i, when >> and i mean, when i, when i watched, i didn't think feminism, i just thought plastic. >> yeah, there's 2.5 hours i won't get back. fantastic. >> it didn't work for me, >> yeah. it didn't work for me, but it's obviously been very big box office. >> been, n box office. >> been, i think >> it has been, and i think that's where awards get it wrong, you know what wrong, because you know what most like go and know most people like to go and know about what they go to see, about and what they go to see, that's not what we see at award season. so that's why most people don't tune in, you know,
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you'll you know, you'll see the red, you know, you'll see the red, you know, you'll celebrities you'll see the red, you know, you red celebrities you'll see the red, you know, you red carpet. :elebrities you'll see the red, you know, you red carpet. but)rities you'll see the red, you know, you red carpet. but that's it. the red carpet. but that's it. >> but are usually very >> but they are usually very high brow. you know, we describe them as arty films. yeah. about them as arty films. yeah. about the photography more an the photography is more of an appreciation of form than the photography is more of an arwouldtion of form than the photography is more of an arwould be of form than the photography is more of an arwould be what form than the photography is more of an arwould be what you'd)rm than the photography is more of an arwould be what you'd enjoyian it would be what you'd enjoy seeing cinema. seeing at the cinema. >> i mean, maestro would >> yeah. i mean, maestro would be one of those. yes. obviously it's that takes like any it's a film that takes like any of them. it takes itself so seriously, darling. serious. seriously, darling. so serious. senous serious and oppenheimer movie three serious and oppenheimer movie thre it wasn't the last hour >> it wasn't until the last hour where i really got into it, and i was like, this film could have just long and just been an hour long and that's what a lot critics that's what a lot of critics have saying. have been saying. >> so started watching it and >> so i started watching it and thought, are going to thought, when are we going to see atomic bomb go off then see an atomic bomb go off then sake? it ever get there? >> i don't know, five minutes or so. but again tonight security is going to be tight. over 2000 security are going to security guards are going to be rounding dolby theatre rounding the dolby theatre because know, because of protesters. you know, they the grammys they protested at the grammys last so i think want last month. so i think they want to make statement. and it's to make a statement. and it's not pro—palestine. i think not just pro—palestine. i think it's side, too. and it's the other side, too. and they know the world's watching. >> security has i really >> so security has and i really do think, you know, these self—important and
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self—important actors and actresses who like to make a speech to speech that means something to the yeah, they will be the world. yeah, they will be very tempted to something very tempted to say something and you know, the world's and it's you know, the world's watching. >> so, you know, they want to make those kind statements. make those kind of statements. and, their agents and, but most of their agents will not but if will warn them not to. but if you to make those you want to make those headlines, that's how is. but headlines, that's how it is. but i'm more about the i'm more excited about the fashion. and these will i'm more excited about the fasgetting|d these will i'm more excited about the fasgetting a these will i'm more excited about the fasgetting a goodie will i'm more excited about the fasgetting a goodie bag will i'm more excited about the fasgetting a goodie bag worth be getting a goodie bag worth £110,000. jealous i'd love to go just for the holidays. >> and the yes one to switzerland, st bart's and a hollywood retreat. >> oh very nice. i tell you what it's saying. if you red carpet it, you're there with a microphone and you want to interview it. that would terrify me because i don't think i'd recognise them immediately. it's missed big stars and missed some big stars and hollywood changing because hollywood is changing because i used to love the oscars from like the early when you like the early 90s, when you really those big golden really see those big golden hollywood stars, where it's hollywood stars, where now it's really chop and here. really chop and change here. >> you this year you might >> you see, this year you might not see another couple of not see for another couple of years, it is worth watching years, but it is worth watching for the frocks is. for the frocks it is. >> some people make some absolute shows, don't they? >> some look fabulous, other
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people certainly right. people certainly get it right. yeah, sorry the yeah, i feel sorry for the men because they really make statement. >> yeah. isn't it? yeah. oh, stephanie, lovely to see you. you're gonna have a busy night tonight. a nap. tonight. go have a nap. >> now. is mother's day, >> now. it is mother's day, isn't it? >> mother's day today. isn't it? >> to mother's day today. isn't it? >> to celebrate day today. isn't it? >> to celebrate our today. isn't it? >> to celebrate our mums , even time to celebrate our mums, even if they're no longer with you anymore. >> yeah. anymore. >> now, gifts and cards are being brought to shower our mums in love and affection, along with going out for food and dnnks with going out for food and drinks mark the occasion . drinks to mark the occasion. mother's a huge boost for mother's day is a huge boost for businesses. it's big businesses. yeah, it's big businesses. yeah, it's big business and our yorkshire reporter anna riley went along to a mother's event in to a mother's day event in harrogate, is actually harrogate, which is actually aimed increasing trade in the aimed at increasing trade in the town this weekend. >> 321 go go go. >> 321 go go go. >> it's mothering fun day in harrogate. a free inflatable event for mums and children to win top mother's day themed prizes. the dash and grab game is hosted by harrogate improvement district, with the aim of boosting sales for businesses in the town. this
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weekend . weekend. >> i think at the moment it's really important to support local businesses because we're in a cost of living crisis. there's challenges around the budget announced this week, budget was announced this week, so challenges around so there's challenges around business that business rates, around rent that businesses every every businesses pay. so every every penny can support penny that people can support local and national local businesses and national retailers does matter. so retailers really does matter. so whether it's harrogate or whether it's harrogate or whether it's harrogate or whether it's a town or whether it's other a town or city centre, it's really important more than ever to important now more than ever to support town. so support your local town. so mother's father's day, mother's day, father's day, christmas, summer holidays, it's just a really good just it's just a really good time businesses, to time to support businesses, to increase increase increase footfall, increase spend those spend and just celebrate those people you. people that matter to you. >> bouncing joy. mums and >> bouncing with joy. mums and kids here enjoy the tradition of mother's it's a special mother's day. it's a special occasion to honour and appreciate mothers for their love, care and hard work. >> well, i think it's nice. i think mums often do a lot of stuff, quite thankless stuff don't they? so yeah, it's nice to be recognised. i'm going to be able to spend it with my mum and my partner's mum, but also this one as well. >> so we're going to have a really nice day together. celebrating harrogate and yeah, it's to really fun
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it's going to be really fun because it's about loving your mum. >> it's a happy mother's day and we wanted to celebrate for our mothers day. >> she looks after us and we get into the shops and get her some chocolate . chocolate. >> it shows her that, that she's really special and we all love her, so it's just nice to have a special day to celebrate her. >> with shoppers in britain expected to spend £1.7 billion on mother's day this year, the celebration is a triumph for trade as well as a fun time for families . anna riley, gb news, families. anna riley, gb news, harrogate . harrogate. >> h arrogate. >> lovely, harrogate. >> lovely, lovely day, a lovely harrogate too. >> yeah certainly is. >> yeah certainly is. >> oh, shall we start some of these lovely views we've had in about mother's day. >> oh they just are lovely aren't they. >> paula says hi. if it's
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possible to read this out, i'd be so grateful. morning, paula, just to say a massive thanks to my mum, lesley whitstable . my mum, lesley from whitstable. she a wonderfully she is such a wonderfully supportive loving mum who supportive and loving mum who always puts everyone i'm always puts everyone first. i'm just envisioning her just i'm envisioning her watching now. she's getting me upset now, she said, she puts everyone first and makes the best roast dinners, of course. sorry that i'm at work today, but i'll see you later with holly and harry. we all love you so much. try and relax today, but whatever makes you happy. so much. try and relax today, but to whatever makes you happy. so much. try and relax today, but to you ever makes you happy. so much. try and relax today, but to you always,ikes you happy. so much. try and relax today, but to you always, mummy,|appy. love to you always, mummy, and thank everything. oh thank you for everything. oh it's just so lovely. >> isn't it nice? >> isn't it nice? >> oh, it's so lovely reading all the lovely, lovely messages, this is. we've been this one and it is. we've been reflecting on morning. it is a difficult day for lots of people for many, different for many, many different reasons. one of them reasons. sarah is one of them who i am finding today who says, i am finding today very difficult as i haven't seen my son three years due to a my for son three years due to a silly argument. he has two children, my grandchildren. i have yet the pleasure have not yet had the pleasure of meeting thought meeting them, but if i thought for one that i'd never for one second that i'd never see again, i would have held see him again, i would have held on him and never, ever let on to him and never, ever let him go. oh, sarah.
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>> oh, i feel for you so much. and it's so sad. yeah. me too , and it's so sad. yeah. me too, let's hope it's not going let's hope that it's not going to for much longer. to be for much longer. >> yeah, let's hope so. >> yeah, let's hope so. >> duncan says i lost my mum to cancer when i was eight and i'm 60 now, but i still say in my head, happy mother's day. oh, no matter how long everyone misses their duncan. their mum, that's duncan. >> it's going to set me off. >> oh, it's going to set me off. >> oh, it's going to set me off. >> absolutely right. i know this is really catherine says is really lovely, catherine says happy to all mums. happy mother's day to all mums. >> has just turned 104 and >> mine has just turned 104 and she just lovely. wow she is just lovely. wow >> tom i'm 80 and i'm >> tom says i'm 80 and i'm writing my autobiography . it's writing my autobiography. it's amazing the influence my mother had my life career . i had on my life and career. i miss her every day. mum made it to 96 and outlived three husbands. wow. she sounds as though she was quite a remarkable person. >> yeah she does. >> yeah she does. >> oh, should we do nicholas as well? >> yes. >> yes. >> and then you do carols. yeah. okay yes. all right. nicholas says i'm a mother to two and a grandmother to two. i am a kinship carer to one of my grandchildren. since she was one and estranged from her mother.
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there are over 180. kinship must be 1000 180,000 kinship carers in the uk, and it's sadly becoming more common. that's when you sort of take over the role of mum, isn't it? so it's bittersweet, but important to remember there are many with no mum, others with two mums and various combinations thereof. and today is about thanking those special people in your life that do that role , because life that do that role, because it's not as straightforward as it's not as straightforward as it used that's a really it used to be. that's a really brilliant point. >> really point. yeah. and >> really good point. yeah. and the i imagine that the stepmoms, i imagine that must a difficult relationship must be a difficult relationship sometimes. to you sometimes. so, you know, to you as well. mother's day. and as well. happy mother's day. and carol an american carol says, i'm an american living in england for 47 years. my son, who's born here, tells me that since i'm an american, i won't be getting a card today. he says he'll get me one for americans mothers day in may instead of course, being a male, he forgets every year . what instead of course, being a male, he forgets every year. what is a mother to do? >> you have to remind them, carol. >> you have to drop them a text. you have to say it's mother's day, mother's by the
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day, mother's day, and by the way, expecting at the very way, i am expecting at the very least, to remind peter least, i had to remind peter andre yesterday he didn't. no, no, got baby number 3 or 4 no, he's got baby number 3 or 4 coming. and i said, oh, it's obviously mother's tomorrow. coming. and i said, oh, it's obvi he ly mother's tomorrow. coming. and i said, oh, it's obvi he went ther's tomorrow. coming. and i said, oh, it's obvi he went ther's day norrow. tomorrow. >> yes, want you to get >> oh yes, i want you to get something from the kids. >> and went, blind panic. so >> and he went, blind panic. so anyway, well, at least you avoided a problem there. >> fine. tell what, >> that's fine. i tell you what, before there is before we move on and there is still to get those messages still time to get those messages into us by the way, if you want to give shout out to a very to give a shout out to a very special person that you think of on day, it on mother's day, then get it into us. vaiews@gbnews.uk mom, but have but buckingham palace have released day picture released a mother's day picture of the and the late queen. of the king and the late queen. isn't it lovely that they've doneit isn't it lovely that they've done it that way? and on their instagram they've written wishing all mothers and those who are missing their mums today a peaceful mothering sunday. >> oh goodness, how beautiful is that? >> that's lovely. of course, the king is remembering his mum. >> oh, that's that's emotional isn't it? looking at the queen, i love the fact, you said, i love the fact, like you said, the focus on her late majesty and her smiling she's so and her smiling face. she's so
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proud and king charles proud there and king charles kissing her hand. >> a beautiful, lovely, >> what a beautiful, lovely, lovely mother lovely between mother and son. >> choice there too. >> and it reminds you that doesn't matter how old you are. if you a lovely mum, and you if you had a lovely mum, and you can miss her, if you can still miss her, even if you lost her quite a while ago. and ineven lost her quite a while ago. and i never, you know, you never think of that. will be think of that. the king will be thinking his mum today. thinking of his mum today. >> will. yeah he will. >> oh he will. yeah he will. what a beautiful, beautiful image. keep those messages image. do keep those messages coming to coming in. it is an honour to read morning. very read them this morning. very emotional. it's emotional. i'm sure it's emotional. i'm sure it's emotional your house as well. emotional in your house as well. for those who love for all of those who love their mummies, take look at mummies, let's take a look at the shall we? now with greg. >> looks like things are heating up. boxt boilers is sponsors of weather on gb news. >> hello. good morning. welcome to your latest gb news, weather from the met office. it's going to be a cloudy day today . to be a cloudy day today. there'll be outbreaks of light rain and drizzle and it's still a chilly feel for the time of year too. and looking at the picture for this morning, a lot of across the uk.
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of cloud across the uk. outbreaks of rain many outbreaks of rain across many areas, bit sunshine areas, just a bit of sunshine towards the south—west and that remains so for the afternoon too. but this could trigger 1 or 2 showers as we move through into the evening time elsewhere. generally, it stays cloudy for much of the day, outbreaks of light rain and drizzle and the wind still coming in off the nonh wind still coming in off the north sea, so a chilly feel for many of us into the evening time this rain will continue to push its way westward. still a lot of low cloud behind it. some drizzle in places too, so a damp evening to come. and that takes us into monday as well. it remains cloudy through sunday night. further outbreaks of light rain and drizzle in places, some low cloud leading to some foggy conditions over the higher ground and temperatures again falling to around mid. single figures due to the cloud cover not falling too low at all, but it does mean another cloudy grey start to monday. outbreaks and monday. outbreaks of rain and drizzle feeding in off the north sea, particularly down these eastern areas, quite eastern areas, remaining quite damp of the day. best damp for much of the day. best of any brighter spells will be
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towards western coast, even towards western coast, but even here it will remain largely cloudy through the day. some showery rain for northern ireland too, and temperatures just about getting into double figures. soon. figures. see you soon. >> warm feeling inside from >> that warm feeling inside from boxt boilers sponsors of weather on . gb news. on. gb news. >> thanks, greg. well, here's your chance now to enter our latest great british giveaway and win £12,345 in cash and a whole host of seasonal treats. >> we're springing into spring and giving you the chance to win the seasonal essentials. first. there's an incredible £12,345 in tax free cash to be won, plus a spnng tax free cash to be won, plus a spring shopping spree with £500 in shopping vouchers to spend in the store of your choice. and finally, a garden gadget package to enjoy, including a handheld games console, a portable smart speaker and a pizza oven for
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your chance to win the vouchers. the treats and £12,345 in tax free cash. text gb win to 84 902. text cost £2 plus one standard network rate message or post your name and number two gb zero three, po box 8690 derby rd one nine double tee, uk only entrants must be 18 or over. lines closed at 5 pm. on friday the 29th march. full terms and privacy notice at gbnews.com/win. please check the closing time if watching or listening on demand. good luck ! listening on demand. good luck! >> yes good luck. that would be a good mother's day gift, wouldn't it? mind you, you won't know about it for a while, right. do stick with us. still to come. could artificial intelligence ever replace the arts? that's
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welcome back to breakfast with
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ellie and anne. really good to have your company this morning. now we're going to be talking about al and whether it's going to job or your to take over your job or your livelihood, your profession. >> angel songwriter >> because the angel songwriter guy that the guy chambers has said that the increasing use of artificial intelligence in music is utterly terrifying . terrifying. >> but some argue that using ai in artistic fields can help us reach new levels of creativity. >> so today we're debating should i be used in art? well, it is already being. i suppose it's inevitable that it's going to happen. but joining us now, the co—founder of implement ai, piers linney and music publicist michael infante, good morning to you both. let's let's start with piers you because i presume you think not only is it inevitable, but i mean , it's happening but i mean, it's happening already, isn't it, good morning from my mum's, by the way, it's inevitable . it's inevitable, inevitable. it's inevitable, you're seeing that , you know, in you're seeing that, you know, in chatgpt it may have used it. the g stands for generative generation. so this technology is very, very good at
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generating, you know, words, images, video even, and sounds . images, video even, and sounds. so, you know, the great thing about you mentioned actually, is that anybody now, i mean, my, our christmas card was our corporate christmas card was basically a song i created with lyrics and a jingle , but every lyrics and a jingle, but every client individually. so yes, there are issues about, you know, provenance and where, where it comes from and making sure artists get paid. but also it means now that everybody can be creative, maybe you have to watermark everything . maybe watermark everything. maybe that's the a use case for nfts. finally so the artists know that, you know, that's from the artist. but my personal view is this is going to go full circle, and eventually we're going to want to pay a premium for, you know, human generated creativity i >> -- >> okay, michael, really interested what you interested to know what you think. what do you think this will do to the industry ? will do to the industry? >> think it's the >> well, i think it's the natural evolution you're natural evolution that you're going technology step going to have a technology step into people were. but but into where people were. but but there is, of course, the love and the depth that a human artist will bring to creativity .
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artist will bring to creativity. but using tools such as ai, assisting if you like. the way that we work is the same as any kind of other industry that's been affected. if we go back now for three, 400 years, the agrarian revolution, revolution in the industrial revolution, we talk about tools and machinery coming in and assisting mankind in way that it works . so in the way that it works. so i don't see it as a threat. i think the genie is out of the bottle. i think that the creativity that would worry me, most composers and writers, is going to be a short lived point until we get really masters of our own destiny. the way we work, however , we've been using, work, however, we've been using, ai work, however, we've been using, a! for all kinds of experiments. we represent, you know, over 4 or 5000 artists in publishing. and i know that most of them will be experimenting. in fact, i was to talking ray dorset of mungo jerry, and i was on your show a couple of weeks ago, and we showing release of we were showing a release of some that has just some vinyl music that has just made a comeback in of made a comeback in terms of artists working vinyl . so artists working with vinyl. so we're kind of going stone age to
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space age back again . so space age and back again. so what we'd like to see is people not really worrying about it, but it in the same way as but use it in the same way as you would any other tool. >> it's interesting though, isn't well, of you, but isn't it, well, both of you, but piers, that throughout piers, first, that throughout history always been history there's always been lawsuits brought by one composer against another saying, you know, little tiny phrase is know, that little tiny phrase is something i invented. i wrote it myself , and something i invented. i wrote it myself, and it's very difficult to sometimes tell where something came from, aren't we going to see that the more a! takes over, doing music? because inevitably it's going to pick up on these little phrases that somebody , somewhere is going to somebody, somewhere is going to say that's not a! generated. that was me . i wrote that 20 that was me. i wrote that 20 years ago . years ago. >> it's a big issue. >> it's a big issue. >> i'm actually a lawyer by training, so i kind of follow this, so copyright law wasn't it wasn't really created to in this age , it really struggles to age, it really struggles to handle, the age of ai . so you're handle, the age of ai. so you're seeing, though various court cases in the us that are kind of being thrown out. and the
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argument is, is that we can all, you know, see art and absorb it and then be inspired by it to create our own art. and there's that fine line between blatant copying and plagiarism and then being inspired . so the argument being inspired. so the argument is these models are being inspired otherwise. also it's very, very complicated for every single on social media single person on social media that creates a, you know, a little jingle or some little video to get paid out a bit like they do in the music business. so there's a interest so there's a public interest issue don't want to issue that you don't want to block because technology block it because this technology is changing for humanity, is a game changing for humanity, michael, last word to you. >> well, as music >> well, we've as music producers and publishers, we've also created technology called tcat, which can trace it's a binary product . it will trace binary product. it will trace and track the algorithms of the way music is written. so artists will be able to and music copyright law will be able to use something like tcat to track the algorithms of the way music is composed, but i don't see any time soon where suddenly we're going to be finding, you know, how coming into the courts
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how coming into the law courts and cross—examined by and being cross—examined by various lawyers and saying, did you create this or , you know, you create this or, you know, there's one, there's one counter, and the one counter is if there's no electricity and you turn the power off, you're back to a guy with his pen, his ink writing a rap. >> absolutely. very good. get rid of electricity, i say , talk rid of electricity, i say, talk about back to the stone about going back to the stone age. >> e yeah, gentlemen . >> stone age? yeah, gentlemen. >> stone age? yeah, gentlemen. >> both. thank you very much indeed. fascinating subject. yeah >> en- en— 9 let us know what you >> he is. let us know what you think about that. vaiews@gbnews.uk com. >> to come, aidan >> and still to come, aidan magee back with your magee will be back with your sport, then we'll be looking sport, and then we'll be looking through newspapers.
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happy mother's day again. you're going to read out the one from emily? >> yes. lovely one from emily. who says happy mother's day to my mum, christine. and this is so lovely. i gave birth to my baby boy this week. congratulations, emily. let us know his name. it's been a very
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emotional and stressful week . my emotional and stressful week. my mum been so supportive and mum has been so supportive and showing it means to be a showing me what it means to be a mummy. oh yes, lovely is that? >> and just before we go to aiden for the sport. aiden, i thought you'd like this one. emma mom, janet, is emma says our mom, janet, is so kind because she's letting us go to the football villa v spurs instead of a mother's day lunch today. she knows that football comes first. >> there'll be a feast of football, i can tell you that. yeah, certainly was a race to the top for that one. but i want to start on rugby if possible. okay? because it was terrific okay? because it was a terrific day yesterday. in the words of harry redknapp, appears harry redknapp, who appears on this sometimes 23, this show, sometimes england 23, ireland we spoke to ireland 22. now we spoke to lewis didn't we, lewis moody, didn't we, yesterday? said, well, yesterday? and he said, well, basically, a basically, even though he's a he's a england world cup winner, he's a england world cup winner, he saying that england he was saying that england didn't a chance didn't have much of a chance yesterday it really came yesterday day. it really came of age tournament. match age this tournament. every match we've far is kind of we've seen so far is kind of gone with form. you could probably make exception for probably make an exception for the night when ireland probably make an exception for the to night when ireland probably make an exception for the to francejht when ireland probably make an exception for the to france and/hen ireland probably make an exception for the to france and won,ireland probably make an exception for the to france and won, but nd went to france and won, but ireland meant to be ireland are still meant to be the side the world. they the best side in the world. they went twickenham yesterday.
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went to twickenham yesterday. psychology issues there well, went to twickenham yesterday. pthink, ogy issues there well, went to twickenham yesterday. pthink, andissues there well, went to twickenham yesterday. pthink, and we es there well, went to twickenham yesterday. pthink, and we said,are well, went to twickenham yesterday. pthink, and we said, didn'twell, went to twickenham yesterday. pthink, and we said, didn't we,, i think, and we said, didn't we, that yesterday that ireland has struggled the struggled to get past the quarter finals. they also struggle at twickenham. lewis moody yesterday moody said yesterday that twickenham factor twickenham wouldn't be a factor yesterday, but it's most certainly crowd were certainly was. the crowd were absolutely and there absolutely fantastic and there was kick in the last was a drop kick in the last minute of game from marcus minute of the game from marcus smith. marcus smith, much maligned because he maligned in the past because he wasn't by wasn't particularly trusted by eddie all those years. eddie jones for all those years. a creative player, a very creative player, he's been out last three been out for the last three matches with a calf injury and he came in much the same he came good in much the same way did back way as jonny wilkinson did back in sorry, not lewis in 2003. lewis sorry, not lewis moody. i keep mentioning him. jamie the said jamie george, the captain, said that indeed. yeah. he's that i do indeed. yeah. he's great, he's great. he was great. yeah. brilliant. yeah. he yeah. he's brilliant. yeah. he liked and liked you as well. andrew and bev well. jamie bev he's a stud, well. jamie george, captain, said it was george, the captain, said it was one of my proudest days and we must look, though, at scotland. who went to italy? italy? a terrible team, i have to say. but at home, but if they lost at home, they've at home. so 26 they've lost at home. so it's 26 home defeats a row. it really home defeats in a row. it really is. do you know what though? they played they actually played well against in the against france earlier in the tournament gave england tournament and they gave england a scare as well. so a bit of a scare as well. so there have been signs that
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they've been willing to get it together. >> scotland are in good form. takes to go out again takes courage to go out again and again and again. >> well does, it does, it >> well it does, it does, it does. there'll be a film made about them won't they. about them someday won't they. but lost 13 six nations but they've lost 13 six nations matches yesterday, but they've lost 13 six nations ma29 es yesterday, but they've lost 13 six nations ma29 against yesterday, but they've lost 13 six nations ma29 against scotland,asterday, but they've lost 13 six nations ma29 against scotland, theyiay, 31, 29 against scotland, they braved later braved a bit of a later onslaught. but that was an embarrassing for scotland embarrassing result for scotland and stopped their chances of and it stopped their chances of winning the overall nations. winning the overall six nations. so day's work italy so a good day's work for italy and there's a day for and shows that there's a day for the every, every dog the underdog. every, every dog has its day. yes >> should we take a look at the premier wolves premier league? yes. and wolves have a good run haven't have been in a good run haven't they. >> @ have yeah. gary >> oh they have yeah. gary o'neil is a bromley resident. actually at my local actually i see him at my local cafe called the drawing room now and i should in and again. i should drop that in now gary o'neil now and again. so gary o'neil has a superb job there. he has done a superb job there. he was dispensed with by bournemouth season having bournemouth last season having kept took the kept them up. he took the bournemouth, took the wolves job. i a days before bournemouth, took the wolves job. start a days before bournemouth, took the wolves job. start of a days before bournemouth, took the wolves job. start of the days before bournemouth, took the wolves job. start of the season before bournemouth, took the wolves job. start of the season his)re the start of the season his players leaving right players were leaving left, right and magnificent. the and centre and magnificent. the job he's doing, he's going job that he's doing, he's going to a contender now to be a serious contender now for when gareth southgate finally aside, which finally steps aside, which could of be after euros.
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of course be after the euros. he's done that yeah, he's done that well. so yeah, kudos him. absolutely. kudos to him. absolutely. but yesterday was yesterday the big story was arsenal. they brentford arsenal. they beat brentford two one. a question one. you asked a question last houn one. you asked a question last hour. was ramsdale doing in hour. what was ramsdale doing in goal hour. what was ramsdale doing in goal. that's a goal. goodness me. that's a that's a question could all that's a question we could all we wonder wonder what on we all wonder wonder what on earth he was doing actually because he just was routine because he just it was a routine clearance. johan visser came in and just ricocheted it into and he just ricocheted it into the gave brentford an the net. it gave brentford an equaliser. they turned it around. team said at around. the team mates said at half time that they would do it for spare his blushes and for to spare his blushes and they did. and it meant that arsenal went of the league arsenal went top of the league and later and that leads us into later today. manchester against today. manchester city against liverpool, arsenal liverpool, a draw to arsenal that top of that keeps them top of the league. but is probably the league. but this is probably the biggest game in world football right now and we last right now and as we said last houn right now and as we said last hour, market seeing hour, the black market is seeing tickets £6,500. tickets exchanging for £6,500. doesit tickets exchanging for £6,500. does it surprise me? absolutely extraordinary. >> from £6,060. >> up from £6,060. >> up from £6,060. >> that's the face value. >> yeah that's the face value. i mean you even get it mean you may even get it cheapen mean you may even get it cheaper. if you bought season ticket it would average ticket it would probably average out, per game. out, even less per game. but it's a hell commitment, it's a hell of a commitment, isn't to be there every isn't it, to be there every single, every single match. so that's going a huge game that's going to be a huge game today. it could be last today. it could be the last between klopp and pep. i
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personally klopp personally think jurgen klopp has him. has got anotherjob in him. i think he's a little bit too young to quit, you know, just at this do you think so, this stage. do you think so, couldn't you what it is, couldn't tell you what it is, but no, no, no, i don't want to go out on a high. >> yeah he does. he could do that. he's rebuilt the side. they're going for quadruple. they're going for a quadruple. oh win to oh yeah. city could win back to back oh yeah. city could win back to baccould you stop talking as >> could you stop talking as though you're though you know what you're talking about no i do talking about here? no i do actually opinion on i actually have an opinion on i actually do. >> yeah. so in for the >> yeah. so he's in for the carabao cup. >> the carabao cup >> he won the carabao cup and a few a other bits. few other and a few other bits. >> looking good. and >> but he's looking good. and that's wants to retire. that's why he wants to retire. he his hair. he dyed his hair. >> looks good today. that's my that's take on >> that's my that's my take on your convinced. thank your cloth i'm convinced. thank your cloth i'm convinced. thank you with us. thank your cloth i'm convinced. thank you aidan. with us. thank your cloth i'm convinced. thank you aidan. no with us. thank your cloth i'm convinced. thank you aidan. no worries. us. thank
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welcome back to breakfast with anne and ellie. really good to have your company with us. this morning. we are going through the personal finance the papers with personal finance and consumer affairs commentator
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georgie the georgie frost and the broadcaster pete price. really good to have you both with us this morning. good to have you both with us this morning . and georgie wanted this morning. and georgie wanted to start with you, the sunday mirror front page today is brianna ghey, his mother, who has incredible , has just been incredible, really, her strength to be able to for things on the to campaign for things on the wake of brianna's death. and now she wants to, create mindful lessons as part of the national curriculum in schools. >> yeah. look, she says nothing will obviously bring back her daughter. this is an absolute tragedy on mother's day as well. it's an absolute. it's a reminder that will reminder that there will be mothers but, know, mothers grieving. but, you know, she says it won't bring back her daughter. but bringing in mindfulness sort of classes into the will try the curriculum will try and encourage kids just to be a bit more kind. i mean, i've taught mindfulness, so i know exactly the benefits of what it can bring. it also has its critics as well. it can make you, they argue, self—centred, but argue, quite self—centred, but i think a lot of it just about think a lot of it is just about understanding your emotions and your feelings and empathy. yes, but a lot of it is about i mean,
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when you feel your mind spiralling and going off and is this, is this feeling real? you know, is this emotion? where is this emotion coming from? it's treating it as though would treating it as though you would a your arm to look at a pain in your arm to look at it more detached. it's understanding you're understanding how you're feeling, when you're feeling, which when you're a child through of child and going through all of those issues, i don't know that this any this is going to have any influence on on this sort of case, but i think she's not aware that. i think here is aware of that. i think here is a mother who channel her mother who wants to channel her grief something positive grief into something positive and power to her, and that's grief into something positive and she'sver to her, and that's grief into something positive and she's doing.1er, and that's what she's doing. >> she's using this to deal with the she's remarkable the grief. she's a remarkable woman. but you see, all that she does at school , woman. but you see, all that she does at school, being woman. but you see, all that she does at school , being negative, does at school, being negative, as i always am, is undone when they go back to their room and go on to the computer and start looking at social media and all that fabulous work that she's doneis that fabulous work that she's done is going to be undone. what done is going to be undone. what do we do about this? >> i mean, social media, >> because i mean, social media, i a side i know there's a good side to it, but i was trying to it, but but i was trying to think, what is the good side to it? >> i don't know, i was trying to
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be kind, i know, but i can't think where it connects people, doesn't it? >> a real way. >> if in a real way. >> but it's also cruel. >> yeah, but it's also cruel. >> yeah, but it's also cruel. >> because they stand >> it's because they can stand there da dum, send there and go da da da dum, send and just and it can't be and it's just and it can't be policed. i don't what policed. i don't care what anyone vileness that anyone says. the vileness that is me, not so is written about me, not so much. now i'm off radio. but when i was on radio, every i'm and i'm strong willed. but some people are absolutely distraught. >> it is, is it? we were talking about this yesterday . in about this yesterday. in reflecting what meghan markle said, the night before, saying that she was trolled so horrifically , especially when horrifically, especially when she was pregnant. and my reaction to that was, well then if i'd been her friend, i would have said to her, put your phone down and don't engage it. don't read yeah what else can you say? >> you can't say this to young, young people because they'll feel left out. you know what it was like when we were young, even if we didn't have social media? you don't to the media? you don't want to be the one left out. i cannot one left out. but i cannot imagine. so glad that imagine. and i'm so glad that when growing up when i got when i was growing up and to university and when i went to university particularly, and when i went to university particlmedia around. but now social media around. but now i think what needs to happen
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think what, what needs to happen is , teachers, parents think what, what needs to happen is the , teachers, parents think what, what needs to happen is the oneseachers, parents think what, what needs to happen is the ones we hers, parents think what, what needs to happen is the ones we hers, jtoents think what, what needs to happen is the ones we hers, le target. are the ones we need to target. they to understand the they need to understand the power we talked about i power of this. we talked about i earlier technology earlier understand technology and the uses and all of this sort of thing, and then we can hopefully teach our kids. >> it's an interesting what you said, george, is said, what you say, george, is so right. coronation street had been with three kids been dealing with three kids who've bullied, it's who've been bullied, and it's the pressure from other the peer pressure from other kids. and that's that's just a story . but that's what's story. but that's what's happening in the real world. it is a very cruel social media. >> is there any way the techie people could come up with a filter that, well, you know, you know , i like people, techie know, i like people, techie people, before you are at, you said you write something vicious, you press send and it's out between in the out there between in the pressing of the button. and it being published is there a filter it could go through? well, some i robot says, no, this is unacceptable. i'm not going to post this. >> isn't interesting you say >> isn't it interesting you say that a friend of mine's been banned facebook for putting banned from facebook for putting the word up, but she was the word kill up, but she was saying, husband. going to saying, my husband. i'm going to kill i get home, as you
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kill him when i get home, as you would a joke. she's been would do as a joke. she's been banned she said kill. would do as a joke. she's been barmyi she said kill. would do as a joke. she's been barmy question she said kill. would do as a joke. she's been bar my question with said kill. would do as a joke. she's been bar my question with this kill. would do as a joke. she's been bar my question with this kildo >> my question with this is do we want to give big corporations like meta like elon musk, the power to police our rights and our freedoms of expression? >> yeah. great point . >> yeah. great point. >> yeah. great point. >> because i think about the mastectomy pictures that were put up on facebook and they were banned for being in explicit, really, these are women who've gone through cancer and had their breasts removed. i don't want facebook or meta to police what they deem to be the right thing, but i there can be things like a! tools and there will be ai like a! tools and there will be a! tools. i think with anything ai tools. i think with anything we have a pendulum swinging. it's gone one way. >> i hope it will. elon musk's and all the others, they're profiting from their ability to pubush profiting from their ability to publish anything that people want to say. and i think that's immoral too. >> i do look, as i said, i think i think it's all of this is happening so fast for and as we said, we spoke about al, ai in schools. it's happening so fast
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that governments, that teachers, the parents really can't keep up. so we inevitably with any new you have this new technology, you have this massive swing. bearing in mind twitter has only been around since, 2006? it's not since, what, 2006? it's not a long time. i think eventually we'll to stage where we'll get to a stage where hopefully we understand it better can manage better and we can manage it better. know, meanwhile better. but, you know, meanwhile , people to be more kind? >> quite hard job, hard job, hard job. but start with your mother's. it's mother's day. be kind to your mother and enjoy every minute of her and the people who've lost their mothers. love you . mothers. love you. >> can i read this one out from sarah? yeah, this is eileen. come on, eileen, come on. >> eileen. >> eileen. >> that's what i was thinking. i would love be wish my would love to be able to wish my mom amazing mother's mom eileen, an amazing mother's day watching day today. she's always watching the and the show. great thank you. and would wonderfully would be really, wonderfully pleased mentioned. has pleased to be mentioned. she has brought children, has 11 brought up five children, has 11 grandchildren and great grandchildren and two great grandchildren. absolutely grandchildren. she is absolutely brilliant and we all love her so much. >> oh how lovely . >> oh how lovely. >> oh how lovely. >> worth mentioning eileen. >> worth mentioning eileen. >> yeah, and eunice has been in touch mothers deserve all touch saying mothers deserve all the and all the other touch saying mothers deserve all the farand all the other touch saying mothers deserve all the far morell the other touch saying mothers deserve all the far more than other touch saying mothers deserve all the far more than any er touch saying mothers deserve all the far more than any of the awards. far more than any of the actor people in the main mothers
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guide. those who will be our next generation and get little reward scrap the awards for film and tv, i and give the and tv, i say, and give the pnzes our and tv, i say, and give the prizes our mums. yeah. prizes to our mums. yeah. >> and murphy, please could you send my love and thanks to send all my love and thanks to my mum veronica, who, despite losing her own mum at the age of ten, has been the best mum to me and my sisters. and even and my two sisters. and even though by though she raised us all by herself, we herself, she got on with it. we love mum. thank you so love you lots mum. thank you so much for your mum's. >> to happy mother's day >> sorry to happy mother's day to mother as well. i have to to my mother as well. i have to get in there, doctor. three kids raised us on our own, so thank you. mother. >> name? >> what's her name? >> what's her name? >> sheila. happy mother's day to you. uke >> sheila. happy mother's day to you. like absolute you. she sounds like an absolute star. >> she is. >> she is. >> and, pete, tell us about your bracelet. that bracelet. because that was a lovely bracelet. because that was a lowthis is a story. >> this is a great story. >> this is a great story. >> that 21st birthday >> so that was my 21st birthday present. and it's an id bracelet that mum bought i've that my mum bought me. and i've kept all life. and it wore kept it all my life. and it wore out and then i had it rebuilt. but she made a total show of me because i went, mum, what's that? my name and that? she's put my name and address on it in case i got lost. yeah and i said, what
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happens? what happens if. have we changed. she said if move addresses i'll change it. mother, made a total show of mother, you made a total show of me. oh. p prize five eight bridge road, west kirby . he bridge road, west kirby. he knows who he is. >> still. that wonderful? >> still. isn't that wonderful? oh, you so much. thank you oh, thank you so much. thank you so much lovely, lovely so much for lovely, lovely stories from you today. happy mother's day yet here's mother's day yet again. here's greg dewhurst with your weather. >> looks like things are heating up . boxt boilers sponsors of up. boxt boilers sponsors of weather on gb news. >> hello. good morning. welcome to your latest gb news weather from the met office. it's going to be a cloudy day today. there'll be outbreaks of light rain and drizzle , and it's still rain and drizzle, and it's still a chilly feel for time of a chilly feel for the time of year too . and looking at the year too. and looking at the picture for this morning, lot picture for this morning, a lot of across the uk, of cloud across the uk, outbreaks rain across many outbreaks of rain across many areas, a of sunshine areas, just a bit of sunshine towards the southwest and that remains so for the afternoon too. but this could trigger 1 or 2 showers as we move through
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into the evening time elsewhere. generally, it stays cloudy for much of day. outbreaks of much of the day. outbreaks of light rain and drizzle, and the wind still coming in off the nonh wind still coming in off the north so a chilly feel north sea. so a chilly feel for many us into the evening many of us into the evening time. this rain will continue to push its way westward. still a lot of low cloud behind it. some drizzle in places too, so a damp evening to come and that takes us into monday as well. it remains cloudy through sunday night. further outbreaks of light drizzle in light rain and drizzle in places, some low cloud leading to some foggy conditions over the higher ground and temperatures again falling to around mid single figures due to the cloud cover not falling too low at all, but it does mean another cloudy grey start to monday . outbreaks of rain and monday. outbreaks of rain and drizzle feeding the north drizzle feeding in off the north sea, particularly down these eastern areas, remaining quite damp much day . best damp for much of the day. best of any brighter spells will be towards but even towards western coast, but even here it will remain largely cloudy through the day . some cloudy through the day. some showery rain for northern ireland too, and temperatures just about getting into double
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figures. soon. figures. see you soon. >> that warm feeling inside from boxt boilers sponsors of weather on
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gb news. >> good morning. it's 9:00 on sunday, the 10th of march. it is mother's day . happy mother's day mother's day. happy mother's day to you. today >> huge crowds gathered in london yesterday as pro—palestinian protests took to the streets again. but discrepancy is in the way these marches are being policed is causing controversy . we'll be causing controversy. we'll be joined by camilla tominey in just a moment. >> princess diana's brother, earl spencer , claims he was earl spencer, claims he was sexually abused from the age of 11 at boarding school and tonight, if you can stay up long enough, it's hollywood's night of nights . of nights. >> it's the oscars and all the stars will be there gathering on
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the red carpet to celebrate the best movies. be looking best in movies. we'll be looking ahead to likely big winners. ahead to the likely big winners. >> and it is mothering sunday, so do get in touch and tell us how you are celebrating today, or us a message to or indeed, give us a message to your lovely mum or your granny, and will read as many as we and we will read as many as we can air. can out on air. >> and the weather? >> and what about the weather? >> and what about the weather? >> hello there. good morning. it is a cloudy, damp start for many of us. first thing, will it improve at all? will there be some sunshine? find out all the weather details coming up soon. >> to be with you. i'm >> lovely to be with you. i'm anne diamond and i'm ellie costello and this is breakfast on . gb on. gb news. oh, we've been talking all day. of course , all day. well, we've of course, all day. well, we've been on for the last three hours. three hours? yeah, about the fact that it's mother's day and very well put, penelope, for correcting us. it actually correcting us. it is actually mothering mother's mothering sunday. mother's day is the american version, which isn't till may. yes, it is
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mothering sunday day, ali from gateshead. wow. ali i've got to read out your message. i don't know if i'll get through it. she said my mum has had dementia for many but has finally many years, but it has finally really taken hold of her now this the first when this will be the first year when she that i'm her she will not know that i'm her daughter. i can't tell you how hard is, but will still hard that is, but i will still be her wishing her be seeing her and wishing her a happy day and hoping it happy mother's day and hoping it gets even i gets through even a little. i just pray my children never have to go through with me. ooh. to go through this with me. ooh. oh very moving today. >> very, very eileen >> very, very moving. eileen says my mum passed away 34 years ago and i miss her every single day. mother's day is hard, but i'll popping to see later i'll be popping to see her later as she's not far from me. >> lovely. >> that's lovely. >> that's lovely. >> live be doing that >> i live near be doing that won't they? >> says please mum >> gemma says please wish my mum diane happy mother's day. she diane a happy mother's day. she is strongest know . is the strongest woman i know. the week after she retired, so obviously she was thinking of retirement . but i was diagnosed retirement. but i was diagnosed with breast cancer aged just 38. she immediately took over caring for my triplet boys who were
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eight years old. so that's no mean feat, is it? whilst i underwent treatments and major surgeries so that my husband could continue working, she is currently doing daily hospital visits to her partner who has had a stroke, and she is still smiling . we are all looking smiling. we are all looking forward to having lunch together today. all love you so much! today. we all love you so much! oh what a strong it oh what a strong isn't it wonderful when mothers are strong? >> yeah, strong mothers and strong women. honestly some of these mums are just sound incredible, brenda says, wishing my dearest mum and my mum in law. that's lovely as well . a law. that's lovely as well. a very happy mother's day. i would give anything to mother's give anything to spend mother's day with you both again. cherish your today as every day your mothers today as every day they are with us is precious. yeah, that's elaine says we lost our lovely mum kathy on the 11th of december just before christmas. >> she fought a brave two year battle with ovarian cancer. our dad looked after her at home wonderfully. she made it to my 60th in november and dad's 80th on december the 3rd. she was determined to reach his big
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milestone. she passed away peacefully a week later and we miss her deeply. >> and finally , this one from >> and finally, this one from david, who says, i became an orphan at 75 when my mum annie died 18 months ago at the age of 108. wow what an amazing age. she was such a strength to all of her sons and all of her grandchildren, and they would literally rush to help them whenever and wherever were whenever and wherever they were and whatever they needed. we and for whatever they needed. we think her all time and think of her all the time and what truly loving family what a truly loving family matriarch be. love and matriarch should be. love and memories to our nana. >> that's beautiful. >> that's beautiful. >> isn't that lovely ? >> isn't that lovely? >> isn't that lovely? >> isn't that lovely? >> i love that word matriarch as well because we lost . as you well because we lost. as you know, i told you this morning, i've got a sister a i've got a big sister and a little sister and there are three of us, and our mum died a few ago. but was the few years ago. but she was the family was the family matriarch. she was the one all your one you went to with all your problems. she knew exactly how to it out because she'd to sort it out because she'd lived such lived through it at such an experience before, and she was an strength . and when an absolute strength. and when she died, my big sister suddenly realised i'm the matriarch now. oh, wow, you're the matriarch
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how. >> now. >> like the baton had been passed. wow that's quite a baton to pass. what a big shoes to fill . no, exactly the same. i fill. no, exactly the same. i was just thinking. so my granny dorothy may be watching this morning. happy mother's day to you. is the matriarch our you. she is the matriarch of our family. she the closest. and family. she is the closest. and i she's the i said it yesterday. she's the closest a saint that i have closest to a saint that i have met in human form. oh, that's a lovely. her speak lovely. never heard her speak a bad word about a soul in bad word about a single soul in her life . and she's the her entire life. and she's the matriarch our family. her entire life. and she's the ma'and:h our family. her entire life. and she's the ma'and that'sur family. her entire life. and she's the ma'and that's theamily. her entire life. and she's the ma'and that's the sort'. her entire life. and she's the ma'and that's the sort of value >> and that's the sort of value that a good matriarch hands on down the generations . down through the generations. and you look up to that person because they know what to do, how to behave. they know how to reprimand naughty . reprimand you if you're naughty. yes. oh, but doesn't remind yes. oh, but she doesn't remind you manners . yes. you of your manners. yes. >> well, she doesn't take nonsense. >> no, no, absolutely. >> no, no, absolutely. >> so that's exactly what she is. nicest person but is. the nicest person ever. but all wouldn't nonsense. all she wouldn't take. nonsense. >> mum >> you don't want a mum or a nana snowflake, you? >> you don't want a mum or a nanywant snowflake, you? >> you don't want a mum or a nanywant them nowflake, you? >> you don't want a mum or a nanywant them to nflake, you? >> you don't want a mum or a nanywant them to ivflestrong?'ou? you want them to be strong? >> do. and strong women. >> no. you do. and strong women. that what is lovely that is what is so lovely with these coming this these emails coming in this morning, not the morning, is these not only the outpouring love, but also the outpouring of love, but also the strength of these women and these derive strength,
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these mothers derive strength, i think, from those sort of relationships. >> we do. that's it's >> we do. and that's why it's worth celebrating today. >> we do. and that's why it's worandzlebrating today. >> we do. and that's why it's worandzleblroyalstoday. >> we do. and that's why it's worandzleblroyals are y. >> we do. and that's why it's worandzleblroyals are also >> and the royals are also celebrating aren't celebrating mother's day, aren't they? the prince and princess of wales released wales have just released a mother's day photo on their official instagram account on instagram . they have written instagram. they have written thank you for your kind wishes and continued support over the last two months. wishing everyone a happy mother's day. see for catherine. for catherine. very interesting. >> isn't it lovely to have heard from her? >> oh how lovely and what beautiful. i really hope that is a recent picture. i believe it is the middle with the is sat in the middle with the children around, i hope. let's hope so. >> gives us, some real >> that gives us, some real comfort in knowing that she is doing buckingham doing okay. and buckingham palace have also released a mother's day picture of the king and his mum, of course, who he will be missing so much today. >> and on their instagram, the royal family have written wishing all mothers and those who are missing their mums today a peaceful mothering sunday and thatis a peaceful mothering sunday and that is just such a beautiful
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image for them to choose . black image for them to choose. black and white image of the late queen smiling, beaming up at the now king charles, kissing his mother's hand. it really is a beautiful image of mother and son, isn't it? >> doesn't matter how big and powerful important are, powerful and important you are, you king of you could be the king of a country a commonwealth, and country and a commonwealth, and you'll mum you'll still miss your mum today. joining us now are royal correspondent walker. correspondent cameron walker. a very good morning to you cameron i >> -- >> good morning anne. yes i think well let's start talking about kensington palace's new photograph which they have just released. it is the first official photograph we have had official photograph we have had of the princess of wales since her abdominal surgery in january. i can tell you that it is a very recent photograph. it was taken earlier this week in windsor by prince william. and of course it shows princess catherine there sat with her three children prince george , three children prince george, princess charlotte and prince louis. and this is certainly a day of reassurance, i think, because of course, there's been so much speculation, particularly over the last few
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weeks , about the status of the weeks, about the status of the princess of wales's health. then we had that intrusive unofficial paparazzi photograph of her in a car with her mother earlier this week . but now we have car with her mother earlier this week. but now we have an official photograph showing that clearly all is well, and she is continuing her recovery as expected. we always were told that she's not going to carry out any public engagements until after easter, but she is clearly there smiling . with her three there smiling. with her three children, and she has also written a message, as i think you, spoke in your introduction, she for your she said, thank you for your kind continued kind wishes and continued support the last two support over the last two months. wishing everyone a happy mother's , catherine. so mother's day, catherine. so there we go. the princess of wales, pictured for the first time. >> and that is a photograph that the wanted to see, isn't the nation wanted to see, isn't it? so they understood it? i'm so glad they understood that. we needed to see that, and to the point it a to make the point that it is a very recent photograph, because and lovely sort of and even to the lovely sort of domestic side of it, it just seems to be like anyone would have its out on outside in the
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garden and it was taken by prince william. so they've kept it very close . it's not sort of it very close. it's not sort of official, it's something they've just decided to share with us. >> you're totally right. that is exactly nation needed. >> you're totally right. that is exact needed nation needed. >> you're totally right. that is exact needed that1ation needed. >> you're totally right. that is exact needed that reassurance. i. they needed that reassurance. they needed that reassurance. they to the princess they needed to see the princess of that a real of wales. so that is a real relief, it? cameron wanted relief, isn't it? cameron wanted to about buckingham to ask you about buckingham palace because they palace as well, because they have moving have released a really moving mother's of the king mother's day picture of the king and the late queen, haven't they? it's a beautiful choice . they? it's a beautiful choice. >> certainly is. >> yeah, it certainly is. a black photograph taken black and white photograph taken when it was the then prince charles. of course, on the polo field, and a very smiling, beaming, happy queen elizabeth the second, as prince charles has just finished his polo match. and of course, it is bittersweet for him because , of bittersweet for him because, of course, king charles no longer has mother around. but he is has his mother around. but he is monarch and he has a blended family. the queen camilla, of course, has her own two children and lots of grandchildren, and prince and king charles has the prince and king charles has the prince and king charles has the prince and princess of wales and of course, prince harry and meghan across the other side of
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the atlantic. so it is a day very much of perhaps celebrating family. two mothering sunday, of course, very important in many british lives and the royal family very much marking that in their own way. and you mentioned their own way. and you mentioned the princess of wales, the fact that prince william that it was prince william taking the photograph. this is a trend, think, from the prince trend, i think, from the prince and princess of wales. gone are the days where they would invite perhaps a couple of news photographers take an photographers to take an official photograph , of the official photograph, of the royal. they do it royal. instead, they do it themselves and the privacy of their own home. and you see the children there. i don't know if you can bring the children the picture back up, but they're all really really really happy. they're all really relaxed because they know it's their the their father taking the photograph rather than a stranger, a news photographer. and that's what we see, for every birthday of the royal child as well, it tends to be the princess of wales who has taken that official, photograph rather than a news photographer. and i think it just shows the kind of intimate family units that the waleses really have. >> , they've understood the
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>> well, they've understood the difference, haven't they? i mean, know that mean, well, we know that catherine undertaking catherine isn't undertaking any official royal duties at the moment. . but they moment. that's fine. but they have still bothered to do to share their little private moment with us. and it really is so reassuring because catherine looks well, she really does look well. and the kids all look happy. and it's a lovely it's a lovely foursome. they're taken by prince william says it all, doesn't it? yeah. >> language is so >> and the body language is so lovely, you know, lovely, isn't it? so, you know, just see. just beautiful to see. >> the idea. it just >> i like the idea. it just could anyone's background. could be anyone's background. >> isn't it? could be anyone's background. >> just isn't it? could be anyone's background. >> just what isn't it? could be anyone's background. >> just what we isn't it? could be anyone's background. >> just what we needed it?you it's just what we needed as you said. cameron, do want to ask it's just what we needed as you saidabouteron, do want to ask it's just what we needed as you said about these do want to ask it's just what we needed as you said about these reportst to ask it's just what we needed as you said about these reports thatask you about these reports that we've coming in at we've got coming in at the moment car crashed moment of a car that crashed into the gates buckingham into the gates of buckingham palace hours palace in the early hours of this tell us what we this morning. tell us what we know so far. yes we know the car did, as you said, crashed into the front gates of the palace. >> those gates were damaged, i'm told no members of the royal family were in residence at buckingham palace , at the time. buckingham palace, at the time. we're also told that the person who was driving the car has been arrested by police . there's
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arrested by police. there's social media images of the car being absolutely swamped , as you being absolutely swamped, as you can probably imagine, by armed police i also police officers. i also understands that repairs to that iconic gate are very much underway, so no reports of any injuries, no members of the royal family, as i said, in residence , we don't know the residence, we don't know the circumstances as to why the car crashed into those gates. no doubt the metropolitan police will give us more details , will give us more details, perhaps later today, particularly if anybody is charged. but it looks like the instance was very well contained by police and security services at buckingham palace . so the at buckingham palace. so the only damage appears to be the gate which is being repaired as we speak. >> i'm sure they've got a spare pair in a garage somewhere. on i'm do. i'm sure they do. >> cameron, we believe you >> yeah. cameron, we believe you were is were at your mother's house. is that day ? that correct? for mother's day? >> yes, i am, i'm in warwickshire. she's probably watching in a different room, me on the telly. so she's probably surprised seeing the flowers and everything in the background of the yes. the shots. but. yes. >> message? >> what what's your message? what's message your what's your message to your mum or mother's day? i'm going to pull the embarrass him. no,
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pull up the embarrass him. no, i'm to you on the spot i >> -- >> okay, happy mother's day, julie. thank for everything . julie. thank you for everything. and we're going for a nice lunch, this afternoon, so. yeah. >> . oh, cameron. >> excellent. oh, cameron. >> excellent. oh, cameron. >> great. he's star. >> that's great. he's a star. >> that's great. he's a star. >> thanks much, cameron. and >> thanks so much, cameron. and thank us those thank you for bringing us those pictures, the pictures, particularly of the prince and the princess of wales and children, but also that and the children, but also that lovely one of king it lovely one of king charles. it reminds doesn't of reminds you, doesn't it, of those, when was it one of the jubilee things, when he got up to do a speech and he said, your majesty . mummy. oh, and the majesty. mummy. oh, and the crowd went mad . yeah. crowd went mad. yeah. >> it's so lovely to see those moments, isn't it, that of the family, a real human moment. >> and we mustn't forget we've got to say happy birthday to prince edward as well. >> yes, we do. >> yes, yes, yes we do. >> duke edinburgh, 60 years >> duke of edinburgh, 60 years old you believe and old today. can you believe and again loving moment between him and this week. and sophie this week. >> lovely words between >> just lovely words between them each them saying, describing each other friend and other as their best friend and their been lovely. their rock. it's been lovely. >> family are getting >> royal family are getting a bit aren't they? >> royal family are getting a bit it aren't they? >> royal family are getting a bit it is, aren't they? >> royal family are getting a bit it is, and'en't they? >> royal family are getting a bit it is, and in't they? >> royal family are getting a bit it is, and in't tiit.? >> it is, and i like it. >> like it that's >> yes, i like it too. that's what yeah. okay, it's what i. yeah. okay, well it's 9:13 already and been very
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9:13 already and it's been very busy morning here on breakfast because discussing because we've been discussing those protests those pro—palestinian protests which blocked the capital yesterday. joining us now ahead of her programme, which is coming up at 930, is camilla tominey. and i'm sure this is something you're going to be delving today. who delving deep into today. who with camilla. >> absolutely, ladies. well, i'm going to be speaking to the government's anti—semitism tsar, john mann. he's former labour john mann. he's a former labour mp. he's been advising the government for some years. he came out with some pretty punchy words in the sun on sunday this morning, talking about that idea of become no go of london having become a no go zone for jewish people of london having become a no go zone forjewish people because of protests, saying that of the protests, and saying that it's become a hostile environment. so i'll be putting it's become a hostile enviito ment. so i'll be putting it's become a hostile enviito him. . so i'll be putting it's become a hostile enviito him. i'm i'll be putting it's become a hostile enviito him. i'm also )e putting it's become a hostile enviito him. i'm also goingting it's become a hostile enviito him. i'm also going to; that to him. i'm also going to be chatting to the health secretary, victoria atkins . secretary, victoria atkins. she's been looking at anti—semitism comes anti—semitism when it comes to some care professionals . some health care professionals. one particular doctor is under investigation, i also want investigation, but i also want to broaden that out. and i would like to know the government's response, the response, actually, to the arrest of protester arrest of that protester yesterday carrying a poster yesterday for carrying a poster simply saying hamas are
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terrorists. i mean, the man was iranian. he seemed to be dealt with pretty robustly by police, even though the poster was so snatched out of his hands, and it did seem to me to be disproportionate , innit? in disproportionate, innit? in relation the response to some disproportionate, innit? in relthe n the response to some disproportionate, innit? in relthe pro—palestiniane to some disproportionate, innit? in relthe pro—palestinian marches,�* of the pro—palestinian marches, we're also, i'm sure, going to be reflecting on the budget this week, the spring budget, because you had the former chancellor on the programme well, don't you ? >> well, 7- >> well, i ? >> well, i thought that the former chancellor, kwasi kwarteng, was a little bit conspicuous by his absence in the house jeremy hunt the house as jeremy hunt delivered that statement on wednesday. liz truss wednesday. didn't see liz truss ehhen wednesday. didn't see liz truss either, but of course very intrigued for his view of the economic proposals that have been made. sunday telegraph been made. the sunday telegraph has a pretty damaging story, has got a pretty damaging story, basically saying that the basically saying that half the country budget country don't think the budget will difference, and will make any difference, and i thought interesting. thought it was interesting. the lack of the budget lack of coverage of the budget this morning, it this morning, not much on it because there wasn't much in it. so be speaking kwasi so i'll be speaking to kwasi about also got an about that. i've also got an interview with andrew rosindell. he has faced a four year investigation at the back of a complaint about him and his
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sexual wrongdoing . the police sexual wrongdoing. the police have completely cleared him of any of those accusations . so any of those accusations. so he's going to be talking to me. that's the tory mp for romford for the very first time, about that's the tory mp for romford for ordealry first time, about that's the tory mp for romford for ordeal that st time, about that's the tory mp for romford for ordeal that is time, about that's the tory mp for romford for ordeal that is completely an ordeal that is completely overshadowed his life and career for the last four years. >> and you've got johnson on the oh and i've got programme, but it's not boris, his dad. it's not boris, it's his dad. >> it's his dad, stanley. >> it's his dad, stanley. >> he's writing a book about marco polo , which i'll be asking marco polo, which i'll be asking him about, but of course, with lots of stories in the papers today about bringing back boris, i be asking him that i shall be asking him that question too. does his son want to return to the westminster fold, it's a question i'm sure many of our viewers are asking camilla, saying it's the only way the conservatives can win again. yeah, yeah, there's a lot of calling thank of people calling for it. thank you camilla. it's you so much, camilla. it's a packed show. looking packed show. really looking forward you very forward to it. thank you very much it certainly is. >> okay, shall we find about is. >> weather? ll we find about the weather? >> greg's the details >> yeah. greg's got the details for us. >> a brighter outlook with boxt solar , sponsors of weather on .
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solar, sponsors of weather on. gb news. >> hello. good morning. welcome to your latest gp. news, weather from the met office. it's going to be a cloudy day today. there'll be outbreaks of light rain and drizzle , and it's still rain and drizzle, and it's still a chilly feel for the time of year too . and looking at the year too. and looking at the picture for this morning, lot picture for this morning, a lot of uk , of cloud across the uk, outbreaks of rain across many areas, bit of sunshine areas, just a bit of sunshine towards the southwest and that remains so for the afternoon too. but this could trigger 1 or 2 showers as we move through into the evening time elsewhere. generally it stays cloudy for much of the day, outbreaks of light rain and drizzle and the wind still coming in the wind still coming in off the nonh wind still coming in off the north chilly feel for north sea, so a chilly feel for many of us into the evening time. this rain will continue to push its way westward. still a lot of low cloud behind it. some drizzle in places too, so a damp evening to come and that takes us into monday as well. it remains cloudy through sunday night. further outbreaks of light rain and drizzle in
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places, some low cloud leading to some foggy conditions over the higher ground and temperatures again falling to around mid single figures due to the cloud cover not falling too low at all, but it does mean another cloudy grey start to monday . outbreaks of rain and monday. outbreaks of rain and drizzle feeding in off the north sea, particularly down these eastern remaining quite eastern areas, remaining quite damp the day . best damp for much of the day. best of any brighter spells will be towards coast, but even towards western coast, but even here it will remain largely cloudy day. some cloudy through the day. some showery rain for northern ireland too, temperatures ireland too, and temperatures just getting into double just about getting into double figures. you soon. figures. see you soon. >> looks like things are heating up boxt boilers sponsors of weather on . gb news and now is weather on. gb news and now is your chance to enter our latest great british giveaway and win £12,345 in cash and a whole host of treats . of treats. >> we have a ton of top prizes to be won in our spring giveaway. there's a massive
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£12,345 in tax free cash to spend however you like, along with £500 in shopping vouchers for your favourite store, a games console, a pizza oven and a portable sonos smart speaker. and the best news? you could be our next big winner. just like phil, whoever wins it next is going to be as happy as i was, and they're going to get even more money this time round, so why go the draw why wouldn't you go in the draw for chance to win the for your chance to win the vouchers, treats and £12,345 for your chance to win the vo taxers, treats and £12,345 for your chance to win the vo tax free treats and £12,345 for your chance to win the vo tax free casheats and £12,345 for your chance to win the vo tax free cash .its and £12,345 for your chance to win the vo tax free cash . text1d £12,345 for your chance to win the vo tax free cash . text gbz12,345 for your chance to win the vo tax free cash . text gb win 45 for your chance to win the vo tax free cash . text gb win to in tax free cash. text gb win to 84 902. text cost £2 plus one standard network rate message or post your name and number two gb zero three, po box 8690. derby d e one nine double tee uk only entrants must be 18 or over. lines close at 5 pm. on friday the 29th march. full terms and privacy notice at gbnews.com forward slash win. please check the closing if watching or the closing time if watching or listening luck . listening on demand. good luck. >> yes, good luck indeed. now do you stay with us still to come,
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we're going to take a look at today's oscars nominations because place in because that's taking place in la believe. as we la tonight, i believe. and as we look forward to the ken extraordinaire, it's going to be ryan gosling with i believe, 65 other on stage other ken's on the stage tonight. don't want miss tonight. you don't want to miss that
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i >> -- >> hello again. it's mother's day. i think you probably get that by now. and the one great thing about sitting here on a programme is you can say it directly to your mum. yeah, well, stephanie takyi, who's been talking oscars to us all morning. wanted stay till morning. she wanted to stay till the end she could say the end so she could say something very special. >> mother's day to my >> happy mother's day to my darling mother. agnes. love darling mother. agnes. i love you much. and thank you for you so much. and thank you for always being my voice of reason and rock . and my rock. >> oh, that's nice. >> oh, that's nice. >> and then very jealously , >> and then very jealously, everybody backstage in what we
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call the gallery of wanted to have their say to their mums. so this is seb in the gallery. this is from seb in the gallery. he's cheese. sending a he's a big cheese. sending a message julie, been my message to julie, who's been my mum for 33 years. as of next week, can't always be around week, i can't always be around as i work away a lot, but i wouldn't be where i am without her constant and infallible support. me on her support. she raised me on her own. she's a force of good in a sometimes dark world, and i'm half the person she is. and then i'll know i've done things right . yeah. . oh, yeah. >> lovely. beautiful. >> lovely. that is beautiful. beautiful though . beautiful words though. sebastian who's in sebastian cooper, who's in charge to katie. happy charge today to katie. happy mother's day to you. back home in sydney. lucky you. you're going to get a double mother's day this year. >> from kyrees in the >> and from kyrees in the gallery. happy mother's day, mum. sorry i can't be mum. joanne. sorry i can't be with you today. she's working, i'll treat you to one of our girlie days soon. love you lots. >> oh, eesha says happy mother's day, mum. thanks always day, mum. thanks for always being wouldn't being there for me. i wouldn't being there for me. i wouldn't be without you. be here without you. >> that's true, i think >> oh, that's true, i think laura says happy mother's to laura says happy mother's day to my big thank my mum, susie. and a big thank you my kids you for looking after my kids today i can work. you're today so that i can work. you're a fantastic thank you
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a fantastic woman and thank you for you for everything you do. >> and joseph, one of our producers, says, happy mother's day mum who's always day to my mum who's always embarrassing him. and apparently we photo . oh, joseph's we have a photo. oh, joseph's mum . oh, we needed her name. mum. oh, we needed her name. yeah. and that one's from keith. fabulous. >> sophie wishes her mum sarah a happy mother's day. we're just making sure we get everybody in, make sure everybody's in. we've got another lovely picture, this make sure everybody's in. we've gcfrom ther lovely picture, this make sure everybody's in. we've gcfrom bev lovely picture, this make sure everybody's in. we've gcfrom bev invely picture, this make sure everybody's in. we've gcfrom bev in macclesfield,�*|is make sure everybody's in. we've gcfrom bev in macclesfield, who is from bev in macclesfield, who says this is a shout out to my mum . berry hunt, 88 years young, mum. berry hunt, 88 years young, mum. berry hunt, 88 years young, mum to four, mum to four, grandmother to eight, great grandmother to eight, great grandmother to eight, great grandmother to 13 and loved by all. wow. she's done so much for all. wow. she's done so much for all of us. that's her. they're fabulous and we've got to go. we've run out of time. happy mother's day. yes, happy mother's day. yes, happy mother's day. yes, happy mother's day to you. >> camilla tominey is up
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camilla. >> good morning, and welcome to
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the camilla tominey show. wishing you all a very happy mothering sunday. to all those celebrating a happy step. mother's day to my own stepmother. it's been another very busy week in westminster. the chancellor's make or break budget to make budget didn't seem to make anyone happy or indeed break labour's downing labour's advance on downing street . theresa may became the street. theresa may became the 60th mp from the tories to announce that she's not fighting the next general election. defeatism or realism? you decide. former chancellor kwasi kwarteng will be here in the studio to give us his verdict on his successors budget. could this be hunt's last hurrah ? i'll this be hunt's last hurrah? i'll be speaking to health secretary victoria atkins about what she plans for the five extra billion pounds the treasury has set aside for the nhs, as parts of london were declared a no go zone zone, no go zone forjews zone zone, no 90 zone for jews over zone zone, no go zone for jews over the weekend . lord john over the weekend. lord john mann, the government's anti—semitism tsar , will be anti—semitism tsar, will be weighing in on the gaza debate. ihave weighing in on the gaza debate. i have an exclusive interview later on in the show with andrew rosindell , the conservative mp rosindell, the conservative mp for romford, who has recently
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returned to parliament for the first time in almost two years after charges were dropped against him following a lengthy investigation by the met police. and stanley johnson will be to here tell us how he has been following in the footsteps of marco polo and giving us his thoughts on current state of thoughts on the current state of the since they booted out the tories since they booted out his son. are they in need of a bojo comeback? make yourself a cuppa and settle in for what promises to once again be the mother of political shows mother of all political shows. right, let's get straight stuck into the sunday morning papers with my fellow gb news presenter and former defence secretary michael portillo, who, don't forget, is going to be on straight my show. 11 straight after my show. 11 michael, to see this michael, lovely to see you this morning. coming morning. thank you for coming in. >> you have children. >> you have three children. happy sunday. happy mothering sunday. thank you so much. >> e much, now >> thank you very much, now let's started .
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