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tv   Lee Andersons Real World  GB News  March 16, 2024 12:00am-1:01am GMT

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we stop to talk about how we stop children being able to access puberty blockers that would actually stop their development . actually stop their development. so they have spent today filibustering my bill and stopping it being talked about, even though over the last few weeks i have had a huge amount of public support from concerned parents, concerned teachers , parents, concerned teachers, from young people themselves who want these bills measures put into law . into law. >> james heappey has announced he won't stand as an mp at the next general election, saying he wants to prioritise his family and pursue a different career. he's also expected to resign as armed forces minister by the end of this month. more than 60 tory mps have now announced they're leaving the commons , as labour leaving the commons, as labour has accused the prime minister of being too chicken to call an election . as a result, a group election. as a result, a group of activists dressed as chickens clucked outside downing street demanding the prime minister
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name the date. now, labour, added rishi sunak needs to stop squatting in number 10. in other news, police say they've contacted the families of 35 people whose remains were recovered as part of an investigation into a funeral parlour in yorkshire. the bodies and a quantity of ashes were respectfully removed from legacy independent funeral directors in hull after concerns were raised about the storage and management processes relating to the care of the deceased . humberside of the deceased. humberside police described it as a truly awful incident . two people awful incident. two people arrested on a number of offences have been released on bail as enquiries continue and thousands of drivers will be stuck in gridlock traffic this weekend dunng gridlock traffic this weekend during an unprecedented closure of the m25 . five drivers have of the m25. five drivers have been warned to stay away from a five mile stretch in surrey, between junctions ten and ii, to between junctions ten and ii, to be shut in both directions from 9 pm. on friday until 6 am. on monday. it will be the first scheduled daytime all lanes shutdown of the m25 since it
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openedin shutdown of the m25 since it opened in 1986. and for the latest stories, sign up to gb news alerts by scanning the qr code on your screen or go to gbnews.com/alerts. now it's back to lee anderson's real . to lee anderson's real. world. >> welcome to lee anderson's real world. and tonight i'm joined by the senior political commentator for gb news. that's nigel nelson. he's our left in the corner and the very lovely emma webb, political journalist, broadcaster, jack of all trades or jill of all trades. you broadcaster, jack of all trades orjill of all trades. you can or jill of all trades. you can say jack of all trades, but straight to it. there's been some happenings this week, nigel, over the past few weeks actually in parliament. so obviously you know, i've joined the reform some people the reform party. some people say reformed character, say i'm a reformed character, i'm sure about that. and i'm not sure about that. and we saw galloway enter saw george galloway enter parliament a couple of weeks back things are changing back and things are changing politically. the landscape is changing slightly. we've got a
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general year . changing slightly. we've got a general year. is general election this year. is this end of two party politics.7 >> no, i mean, while the first past the post system still exists , two party politics will exists, two party politics will carry on. so i think that if you look at the two surprises over the last few weeks, george galloway winning in rochdale, you defecting to reform? i think that your defection is significant because you've got the first reform mp in parliament, if the polls keep going the way that they, they are and you can get 20% in the of the vote, you're looking at that. of the vote, you're looking at that . elected mps for reform for that. elected mps for reform for the first time. george galloway on the other hand. not so significant is his fourth time in parliament. he's always promised to break the mould, never quite achieved it . and the never quite achieved it. and the idea that he's got 300 candidates out there for the general election, i don't really believe it, especially as they have to fund themselves and they'll soon realise the expense of that goes further than just
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losing their 500 deposit. >> you say i come to nr because nigel says it's not significant that george galloway is. i think it's very significant that he can polarise a whole section of society and get them all out to vote, and not really talk about the rest of his constituency. it was just one group of people that got out to vote. they got him elected. >> it's massively significant. i think it's the beginning of sectarian rather than think it's the beginning of sectend�*n rather than think it's the beginning of sectend of rather than think it's the beginning of sectend of the rather than think it's the beginning of sectend of the two |ther than think it's the beginning of sectend of the two party han think it's the beginning of sectend of the two party system , the end of the two party system, the end of the two party system, the fact that he, he focussed on the fact that he, he focussed on the muslim vote, rallied the muslim vote, postal voting as a whole. other aspect of that that hasn't received an off attention at all, and you know , there are at all, and you know, there are other candidates that are planning to stand in other areas. and if he were to support those candidates and they are like, he he said it himself, he thinks that , that that the next thinks that, that that the next election is going to be about muslims, he is driving a sectarian wedge into british politics, and it's enormously
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significant because of we've seen this on our streets. we canned after weekend after weekend, with so many people who have been mobilised against israel's actions in gaza , we've israel's actions in gaza, we've seen london become a no go zone for jewish people, so i think forjewish people, so i think it's enormously significant. i don't think it's the end of the two party system . but i think two party system. but i think what we're seeing across both parties and your defection is a sign of this, is that the rot is so deeply set in both parties and the only reason why we focus so much on the conservative party is because labour hasn't beenin party is because labour hasn't been in government for so long, and as soon as they are in government, that rot will become very apparent. >> nigel, sectarianism in >> so, nigel, sectarianism in british politics. i think emma's got there and a rot got a fair point there and a rot in main parties. do you 7 ee. agree? >> there's certainly a rot in the conservative party as we've seen and, islamophobia and racism has become a problem .
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racism has become a problem. >> hold on. i want to pull you up on that. nigel. what is islamophobia? >> well, there is there is no set definition. >> are that word ? >> 7. >>i ? >> i think 7_ >> i think we em 7 >> i think we use that word because it is something that encourages his hatred towards muslims , there's no settled muslims, there's no settled definition of it. i think the danger of british politics at the moment is you end up and both british sunak and keir starmer are guilty of this . starmer are guilty of this. you've got keir starmer, who's accusing the tories of islamophobia and the tories accusing labour of anti—semitism. both are not true. as far as the parliamentary parties are concerned, but we don't want the election to come in, come down to a battle or between those two sorts. >> you mean who's the most racist? >> yeah, yeah . we don't want >> yeah, yeah. we don't want racism to be part of the election. >> no, absolutely not. emma. >> no, absolutely not. emma. >> well, i mean, let's talk about the definition of islamophobia, because there is one definition has been one definition that has been put forward, that's the appg's forward, and that's the appg's definition of islamophobia, which and it talks which is pathetic. and it talks about, not just it talks about
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it talks about this idea of muslimness and that if anybody wants to go and look at that report in detail, it's very, very clear that, certain criticisms of islam will be understood as being instrumental in order to attack muslims. things like saying that islam is spread sword. so one spread by the sword. so the one definition that i think the labour party has adopted, the one, the one definition that is being pushed is, is essentially a back door. blasphemy law. so if we're moving into a potential labour government that adopt that definition of islam phobia, plus the potential of either mps fielded by george galloway, or , fielded by george galloway, or, him supporting other candidates who are sympathetic to that kind of sectarian politics. we are heading towards trouble , heading towards trouble, sectarian politics again, nigel. i've been in hot water again recently for saying i want my country back. we want our country back. we want our country back. we want our country back. but this is where we're headed. >> i mean, it depends what you mean about you want your mean about about you want your country i don't
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country back. i don't know whether you want it to whether you mean you want it to go to something like the go back to something like the 19705 go back to something like the 1970s or whatever. 1970s or the 1960s or whatever. but what you've done is you've joined a party which has very simplistic policies at the moment. i'm sure you guys are all going to work out a proper manifesto, but there are so many things that you've put forward now which were fine when you were hoovering up negative votes . but if you're intending now to hooven hoover . but if you're intending now to hoover, hoover up positive votes, they need to be sorted out. so it's little things. it's like , one policy is to give like, one policy is to give a people who can't get a gp appointment within three days, a private appointment with a gp. there are there are 360 million nhs appointments a year , only nhs appointments a year, only 3000 gps. it doesn't work. you have an economic policy to try and deal with cost of living crisis, which is to bring down, vat by 2. that is so simplistic because because shops are not required to pass on that saving
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to customers. so it's only at a time of low demand , like during time of low demand, like during the financial crisis of 2000. >> and emini because nigel didn't answer anything that i asked him in the last piece, we talked about sectarian politics. i think it's a slippery slope . i think it's a slippery slope. emma. i think the emergence of george galloway , who actually george galloway, who actually shook my hand with a bit of a chat with him. but i think the emergence of him just coming and campaigning on one single policy on basically a group of people, a religion . imagine if on basically a group of people, a religion. imagine if i'd said lee anderson had said, i'm going to campaign on the next election on on christian people. what would the uproar be? >> well, people would find it completely unacceptable, wouldn't they? and i think it's not with all respect to nigel, it's not an honest or fair interpretation of you saying you want your country back , to think want your country back, to think of back in terms of time, because this is about having control. you know, people who live who have live in this country who have roots in this country have a right to this country.
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roots in this country have a right to this country . and what right to this country. and what we have at the moment is a situation where we have no control. the government doesn't even seem to have control, whether it's our borders, the nhs that nigel mentioned, and we could talk all day about all of the things that we've lost control over the situation is completely unacceptable . so completely unacceptable. so i agree you, lee. also want agree with you, lee. i also want my back and i feel like my country back and i feel like what we're doing we're what we're doing is we're selling the inheritance of selling out the inheritance of our children and our grandchildren, and we are destroying country as it's destroying the country as it's been to by been handed to us by the greatest generation, and i just, l, greatest generation, and i just, i, i don't think that this should be painted as wanting to take the country back to the 19505, take the country back to the 1950s, though there were certainly things about the certainly some things about the 19505 that were better than today. >> i don't want to go back, nigel. today's we had nigel. today's one. we had rickets polio and scurvy. rickets and polio and scurvy. and toothbrush and there's one toothbrush between old street and stuff between the old street and stuff like that what of like that. what i'm sort of getting at is. there's getting at is. well, there's things from the 505 and 60s i would like, but what i'm going to do is, like, got to do is, like, we've got a whole hundreds of whole literally hundreds of thousands, millions thousands, if not millions of people country, in people now in this country, in
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their that not their communities that do not like us. >> are we talking then about the problem of immigration there? >> yes. yeah. >> yes. yeah. >> okay. well, well, again, reformist on immigration, reformist policy on immigration, is absolutely bizarre at the moment . you would accept 400,000 moment. you would accept 400,000 immigrants into this country on a kind of net zero basis where one in, one out, how the economy can work on that basis , on legal can work on that basis, on legal migrants coming in to fill specific jobs and relying on people emigrating. i'm not quite sure when it comes down to to the cross—channel boats. i cannot see you campaigning on a policy of drowning people in the engush policy of drowning people in the english channel, which is what the people are already drowning in the channel. >> they are. >> they are. >> but if you start turning back tiny little dinghies, they're going capsize more people going to capsize and more people will lives . and it is will lose their lives. and it is just not a practical policy to try and turn them back to france, above the fact there aren't any international waters
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between dover and calais anyway. >> emma, i'll come back to you on this one. >> i mean, is it cruel to turn back boats? >> no, no it isn't. and if the boat capsize, then they would be under obligation to pick the under an obligation to pick the people of the sea. we should people out of the sea. we should be turning boats back to france, i think. and we have to solve the problem. and actually, if you about drowning you care about people drowning the you really the channel and what you really need is to destroy the need to do is to destroy the incentive that makes them cross incentive that makes them cross in the first problem in the first place. the problem is become so soft as is that we've become so soft as a country that people think that they the mick. and they can take the mick. and that's say that we that's not to say that we shouldn't take in genuine asylum seekers, that seekers, but the fact is that we're in many that we're taking in so many that we're taking in so many that we're overburdened we're so overburdened that we can't after the who can't look after the people who actually need our help. >> it always back to >> it always goes back to illegal migration on this programme reason, programme for some reason, something wonder something i'm quite, i wonder why. next we've why. thanks, nigel. next we've got versus left with emma got right versus left with emma webb and macdonald
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welcome back to lee anderson's
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real world. time for right versus left. i've got the very gorgeous, the very lovely, the very beautiful andy mcdonald, the legendary . the legendary. >> that old chestnut. >> that old chestnut. >> that old chestnut. >> that old chestnut look, politics is changing. over the past few years, i've spoken about this earlier. and our voting system, i think, needs personally reforming a little bit. we saw all sorts of accusations with the rochdale by—election, with postal votes. andy, is it time to scrap postal votes , i don't think scrapping votes, i don't think scrapping postal votes, but i'd say reforming the way that they're distributed and the people who are allowed to vote by post, you know, i think, the restrictions that have been put in by the conservative government on voter id should be applied to postal voting more than anything, because that's where actual because that's where the actual cases of fraud happened with the voter agree with turning voter id, you agree with turning up a with a photo at the up with a with a photo at the polling i agree it polling station? i agree with it in principle, think the in principle, but i think the way it's been done is it's way that it's been done is it's been left the returning been left to the returning officers, kind of they've been left to kind of left on their own to kind of administer they so
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administer it how they want. so i think there needs to be a more coherent strategy it, it coherent strategy on it, and it needs to done on postal needs to be done on postal votes. you're going to it votes. if you're going to do it at all, because that's where the only cases fraud happen. only real cases of fraud happen. you're fire. you're fighting the wrong fire. >> the >> yeah, but people in the labour say there's no labour party will say there's no fraud with postal fraud happens with postal voting. prove it. >> do you mean? people >> what do you mean? people in the the the labour party, people in the labour of things. the labour party, people in the lab(know, of things. the labour party, people in the lab(know, people of things. the labour party, people in the lab(know, people in of things. the labour party, people in the lab(know, people in the things. you know, people in the conservative party say lots of people reform party, you people in the reform party, you know, in all three know, you've been in all three and say of things. and you say lots of things. >> postal should we >> so postal votes, should we just them, not entirely, just scrap them, not entirely, because think people, because i think older people, people are able to people who are not able to physically to polling physically get to a polling station vote station should be able to vote by that by post, i agree with you that as much. also agree with voter as much. i also agree with voter id, i think that you should id, and i think that you should have who you are when have to prove who you are when you're voting. think that you're voting. i think that there serious there should be serious restrictions that restrictions around the way that postal voting is used, because restrictions around the way that postal obvious; used, because restrictions around the way that postal obvious vulnerableause restrictions around the way that postal obvious vulnerable point it's an obvious vulnerable point for, democratic system for, the democratic system to be abused. it's obviously vulnerable because vulnerable to that, because you could have a situation where, the a household votes on the head of a household votes on behalf of their entire household , where people are pressured into voting in certain ways, you
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could have a situation in which the people who are voting are not really the people who are voting or the people who are having votes cast on their behalf don't even necessarily speak english. so it's obviously vulnerable to abuse that way , vulnerable to abuse in that way, i think it's surprising that the electoral didn't seem electoral commission didn't seem particularly interested in looking into what happened in rochdale . yeah, i imagine that rochdale. yeah, i imagine that that system has abused many that system has been abused many times before. and but particularly as we see this increase in sectarian politics, and particularly certain cultures that are very patriarchal in, in the very real sense of having one head of the household and possibly having people in that household who don't speak english, who do have a to vote, we need to look a right to vote, we need to look very carefully about at reforming the postal vote system to that democracy to make sure that our democracy isn't abused. isn't being abused. >> we see the rochdale >> so, andy, we see the rochdale by—election. still by—election. people are still talking now the talking about it now with the postal votes. are postal votes. people are suggesting there's some suggesting that there's some shenanigans gone off there. i mean , these areas, like mean, these areas, like rochdale, are traditional labour heartlands. and we know in the
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inner cities, in places like leicester and, and london and places like that, this is, you know, we've had our suspicions for a while that this sort of, postal voting , fraud, if you postal voting, fraud, if you like, as happened over years and labour sort of turned a blind eye to it. it says it. no, it doesn't happen. is it going to affect them now, i don't think it'll affect them any other way, you know, than it would affect the reform party. >> if george galloway stands, you if he does stand, you know, if he does stand, if george you know, george galloway, you know, if george galloway, you know, if george stood against george galloway stood against a proper candidate proper labour candidate, he wouldn't have won, know, if wouldn't have won, you know, if he the late tony he stood against the late tony lloyd rochdale, have lloyd in rochdale, he would have lost. let's be honest, >> yeah. let's let's be honest, george. one time george. >> yeah. let's let's be honest, geo know, one time george. >> yeah. let's let's be honest, geo know, he ne time george. >> yeah. let's let's be honest, geo know, he goesfe george. >> yeah. let's let's be honest, geo know, he goes in george. >> yeah. let's let's be honest, geo know, he goes in when a. you know, he goes in when there's a fuss, when there's there's a big fuss, when there's a sometimes he wins. you a gap and sometimes he wins. you know, won one because know, he won this one because there a real labour there wasn't a real labour candidate. know labour candidate. you know the labour candidate. you know the labour candidate know candidate came fourth. you know like so don't it opposition. so i don't think it will. you know galloway will. you know george galloway is off. you know, forget is a one off. you know, forget his 300 other candidates that he's say, says he's going to say, he says a real candidate. he's going to say, he says a real if candidate. he's going to say, he says a real if somebody like angela >> what if somebody like angela rayner george in
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rayner stood against george in in rochdale? who would win? >> no. galloway because in rochdale? who would win? >> no. he galloway because in rochdale? who would win? >> no. he �*mobilisingzcause he was he was, mobilising the muslim in response to a muslim vote in response to a very particular contentious issue. israel and palestine. he was very clear that that's what he was that's what he was doing, that he was he was campaigning on that one issue because the labour party are now vulnerable to candidates like that because of the position that they take on what's happening between israel gaza. israel and gaza. >> okay. so look, we're going to go to the yes no quiz now . and go to the yes no quiz now. and you know the rules, emma. it's a simple yes or no . and you've simple yes or no. and you've done this a few times, aren't you? yes. i think you got five out of five last time, didn't you? >>i you? >> i did, i did. >> i did, i did. >> wrong answer, so. right. we're going start with you first. >> emma. >> emma. >> frank kessler's comments about diane abbott. were they racist? yes. andy yes, andy. should the prime minister return hessler's donations? no no no no controversy there. emma should bofis controversy there. emma should boris johnson make a political
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comeback? >> yeah . no >> yeah. no >> yeah. no >> and andy, last question. should trans women be banned from female sports , no, no is a from female sports, no, no is a wrong answer . that's from female sports, no, no is a wrong answer. that's a from female sports, no, no is a wrong answer . that's a wrong wrong answer. that's a wrong answer. yes. i'm sorry. andy you're doing so well . you got you're doing so well. you got for this agitation. emma, you got five out of five. well done common sense there. if you want to go back on one. andy, yeah, i think i'll go back on the boris johnson. okay, political comeback. you know, it's been someone wrote, i think it was in the times a couple days ago the times a couple of days ago that the times. i do, that you read the times. i do, i do paper reviews on gb news, which watch on monday which you can watch on monday nights. you know, and i did read it, said was it, in fact, and, said he was going campaigning with going to go out campaigning with rishi. was going be that rishi. it was going to be that winning again. you winning duo all over again. you said steven swinford said that steven swinford i think he was the author. think it was. he was the author. i thought it was rubbish. we don't another etonian don't need another old etonian oxford classicist coming out and talking in the midlands. >> well, i'm winning like 80 seat majority, 80 seat majority. >> well, i'm winning like 80 sea ifnajority, 80 seat majority. >> well, i'm winning like 80 sea if only ity, 80 seat majority. >> well, i'm winning like 80 sea if only he'd 0 seat majority.
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>> well, i'm winning like 80 sea if only he'd 0 sea something >> if only he'd done something with a government with that majority. a government that sort of lost. with that majority. a government tha the sort of lost. with that majority. a government tha the argumentt of lost. with that majority. a government tha the argument thatost. with that majority. a government tha the argument thatosthink >> the argument that i think emily etonian emily talked about etonian campaigning in working class areas. campaigning in working class areiyou're about you were >> you're talking about you were talking posh boys talking about the posh boys in working time. working class areas last time. you were talking the posh you were talking about the posh boys class areas. boys in working class areas. when went to your third when you, went to your third party six years, know, party in six years, you know, you talking about, you you were talking about, you know, working class. >> charismatic, like >> boris is charismatic, like i don't. we a don't. i do think that we have a problem. saw this with problem. and we saw this with the bringing back of david cameron, we see this in the constant culturally, the constant culturally, in the constant culturally, in the constant old films . constant remaking of old films. and night that and we saw last night that they're going make they're actually going to make a titanic two. they're going to build another version of the titanic . and i think boris titanic. and i think boris coming back could be a little bit like that. yeah. but, you know, politics a know, our politics needs a little something injected little bit of something injected into it. and i don't think that there's obvious that there's anything obvious that should from there's anything obvious that should back, from there's anything obvious that should back, particularlyn there's anything obvious that should back, particularly given coming back, particularly given that premiership was during that his premiership was during covid. he didn't really get much of a chance to know. he didn't get fact that what we all get the fact that what we all hoped he would do, i didn't get a fair crack. hoped he would do, i didn't get a fair crpolitics is being very >> but politics is being very generous these days. generous politics these days. andy soap andy is almost like a soap opera, i friends and family
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opera, i know friends and family now who don't watch corrie or emmerdale. they're watching , you emmerdale. they're watching, you know. pmqs and gb news know. yeah, pmqs and gb news and, other stations got the politics is live now in people's living rooms, actually living and breathing it each day is that. has that been a good thing, do you think? >> i think it's had. yeah, it's definitely cons. >> i think it's had. yeah, it's defi know cons. >> i think it's had. yeah, it's defi know ever cons. >> i think it's had. yeah, it's defi know ever since cons. >> i think it's had. yeah, it's defi know ever since the ons. >> i think it's had. yeah, it's defi know ever since the brexit you know ever since the brexit vote where was a mass vote where there was a mass mobilisation normal mobilisation of just normal people something people about something they cared that 2016 cared about since that 2016 vote, a lot of people have vote, it's a lot of people have had a to say and it's not had a lot to say and it's not a bad thing, but sometimes people do take it, but it can it can be bad for your mental health. >> chaotic politics. oh yeah. i mean, to scream at the tv mean, i used to scream at the tv before into politics. before i got into politics. >> think a lot of >> well, it's i think a lot of people feel very disappointed. and it's frustrating because nothing seems to change. and if you're if you're in it for a long time or you're paying very, very sort of solid attention to it for a long time, you do sort of want to smash your face. they want to pay attention. >> yeah. unfortunately, andy, you weren't paying attention dunng you weren't paying attention during no quiz. you got you weren't paying attention d|miserable no quiz. you got you weren't paying attention d|miserable paltryquiz. you got you weren't paying attention d|miserable paltry for.. you got you weren't paying attention d|miserable paltry for. it'su got
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a miserable paltry for. it's simple. it's simple stuff and the pathetic score four out of five, you need to go to the stephen powis school of. yes. no quizzing emma. brilliant. five. five out of five. again. superb. she's a winner. five out of five. again. superb. she's a winner . thanks, emma. she's a winner. thanks, emma. look, coming up next, we're going back in the day with tv legend christopher biggins. he's in the building
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i >> -- >> 2024 a battleground year. >> 2024 a battleground year. >> the year the nation decides. >> the year the nation decides. >> as the parties gear up their campaigns for the next general election. >> who will be left standing when the british people make one of the biggest decisions of their lives? who will rise and who will fall? >> let's find out together for every moment. >> the highs, the lows, the twists and turns. >> we'll be with you for every step of this journey in 2024. >> gb news is britain's election
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. channel. >> it's time for back in the day with tv legend christopher biggins. wow. listen, i've been watching you on tv since i were that high and one of my favourite programs of all time, we've got a few from the 70s. favourite programs of all time, we've got a few from the 705. is programs like rising damp, dad's army , but the one i keep army, but the one i keep watching on on a rerun , i'm not watching on on a rerun, i'm not sure what channel it's on. is porridge and you're in that, weren't you? >> i was it was a fantastic series to be involved in, when sid lotterby , who produced and sid lotterby, who produced and directed it, asked me to do it, i was thrilled . not only was i was thrilled. not only was i thrilled because, of course it was work . and, but the thrilling was work. and, but the thrilling thing was ronnie barker. yeah, who was just the best? i mean, he was the most extraordinary man. and what i always say about ronnie barker was he was not. he was not a comedian. he was a comedy actor . and i say that in comedy actor. and i say that in the nicest possible way, because if he felt one of dick clement
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andian if he felt one of dick clement and ian la frenais lines was better said by me, he would give it to me rather. if rather than always wanting the funny line because he saw the whole picture. and that's where he was so clever. and of course it was brilliantly cast. there were so many wonderful people in it, you see growing up, you know, because i was, you know, eight, nine, ten years old when these sort were and sort of programmes were on and i couldn't get my head round the fact this barker fact that this ronnie barker chap programme chap came on a programme on saturday two ronnies. >> yeah. with white hair. yes. and then following day, and then the following day, i wonder was his watch this, wonder if it was his watch this, this with with this cockney geezer with with dark the prisoner. dark hair and the prisoner. i could believe it was the could not believe it was the same person. could not believe it was the san no,erson. could not believe it was the san no,ermean, of course, in >> no, i mean, of course, in those talent. those days that was talent. you know, not there's those days that was talent. you kn
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from my neck of the woods. >> sad when died. from my neck of the woods. >> oh, ;ad when died. from my neck of the woods. >> oh, ;a(wasen died. from my neck of the woods. >> oh, ;a(was tragic. iied. from my neck of the woods. >> oh, ;a(was tragic. lad. from my neck of the woods. >> oh, ;a(was tragic. i mean, >> oh, it was tragic. i mean, absolutely tragic. i mean, you know, i was told the sun, know, i was told by the sun, they rang me, i was doing some, some filming in northumberland, and came up and talked to and they came up and talked to me it. i was me about it. and i was absolutely shattered because he, out everybody i was working out of everybody i was working with particular time , with at that particular time, would undoubtedly the would undoubtedly have been the biggest the world, biggest star all over the world, because he was just breaking into that . and of course, into that. and of course, i think it was an enlarged heart he had and just just left. >> so he left two little girls as well. >> i know well who've done terribly well. yeah, yeah, in the acting profession. and the wife just wonderful . wife was just wonderful. >> so what was it, christopher, that made you want to go into acting? was you messing around at was brought up in at school, i was brought up in salisbury, but i came from. i was born in oldham, and my mother hated oldham, so she came down after three weeks after i was born to salisbury. and my great auntie vi, who was a terrible snob , insisted that i terrible snob, insisted that i have elocution lessons because she didn't like the fact that
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everybody talked like that down in salisbury. so, you know, she didn't like the accent. so i had elocution lessons and the mrs. christian who taught me my elocution lessons , was elocution lessons, was interested in theatre, and she could see something in me. and so she encouraged me. so i did lots things, at school . and lots of things, at school. and then when i left school at 16.5, i was lucky enough to have in salisbury a wonderful theatre, a repertory theatre. and i went and i said, can i have a job? when i was, you know, going to leave school? and i wanted to go into theatre. and he said, you can come. reggie salberg , who can come. reggie salberg, who ran the theatre, said, you can come for two weeks. and i stayed for two years. i was on £2 a week the first year and then went up to £6 a week. the second yeah >> what year was that, chris, right. so that was, 605, 90s right. so that was, 605, 905 round about the 60s, £2 weight. >> was it a fair wage then? well ho. 110. >> no. >> well, not at all. i was heavily subsidised by my family , heavily subsidised by my family, you know, who were wonderful. but i mean, you know, and then i
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went to bristol old vic theatre school, which was great because went to bristol old vic theatre schocwas�*nich was great because went to bristol old vic theatre schocwas an| was great because went to bristol old vic theatre schocwas an actress'eat because went to bristol old vic theatre schocwas an actress called:ause there was an actress called stephanie cole who you all know, and insisted i went to drama and she insisted i went to drama school. and so that's when i started. what was your big break then? i suppose a way then? well, i suppose in a way it had to be i was i did a lot of televisions before , porridge. of televisions before, porridge. but porridge was certainly where and of course i was called lukewarm. and i remember vividly i had a convertible car and i was at the traffic lights and lorry driver looked down at me and said, oh, hello, lukewarm. so i thought, now i've so i thought, well, i now i've made a mark as a character because was that of because it was that sort of humour weren't they, humour in the 705, weren't they, that know, humour in the 70s, weren't they, that know, these that sort of, you know, these camp i remember, of my camp men i remember, one of my comedy heroes larry grayson . comedy heroes was larry grayson. >> oh, yeah. he was absolutely hilarious, hilarious company taupin and danny la rue, dick emery . yeah, i sometimes watch emery. yeah, i sometimes watch a few of his clips on, on, on youtube. i don't i don't suppose you could get away with that sort of human aquajet. >> well, i don't think you could. i mean, you know, i
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remember i had a i played in doctor at sea, an outrageous queen, and i performed the hair, and i played it very, very carefully. and i got a lot of stick. then in the 70s, carefully. and i got a lot of stick. then in the 705, so then when i decided when i was asked to do lukewarm, the i on earth, as they called him, the i, decided not to go down that road and to play. and of course, it worked brilliantly because there's a wonderful scene where, he writes, ronnie barker writes letters to all the wives begging them to come to the, prison to see them. and, so they all the wives come and they come on a bus and they're reading , bus and they're reading, suddenly realised they've all got the same letter. and my boyfriend is there too, and he realises, and of course, it was the biggest laugh ever when they people realised. >> you get this sort of >> so when you get this sort of fame and fortune that you've got christopher, going get christopher, you're going to get involved good causes involved in some good causes aren't charities. aren't you. charities. >> it's, it's, it's >> yeah it is, it's, it's, it's good to be involved. >> anything you're involved in at the moment. >> there's wonderful
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>> well there's a wonderful story i really get story which i can't really get oveh story which i can't really get over. there's a boy who is badly physically and mentally handicapped, and he has the only way he could communicate is by a computer. so so what they want to do is he's now, i think, 20. i think they want to give him a computerised thing where his voice comes through. yeah. and he's asked they asked him what voice would he like. and he said i'd like christopher biggins voice really. so i'm going to go and record everything that you have to do. so that when he presses a button or rather type something out and then presses a button to for people to hear, you'll get my voice. and i'm really, really touched by it is a big honour and i'm thrilled to bits , and it is good when you're bits, and it is good when you're in a position to be able to do things like that, you know, and, and help raise money. i mean, i suppose over the years i'm quite old now. i've been in the business over 60 years and, you know, it's wonderful to be able to raise millions and millions
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and which , you know, i and millions, which, you know, i have done. >> heroes, thinking >> so acting heroes, thinking back, back in the day, who would it be? >> well, i, you know, i'm we were taught at drama school, bristol old vic school. we were taught the classics. and i suppose you have to i always looked up to laurence olivier. i mean, olivier was and mean, laurence olivier was and robert stephens too. i remember going to see him play atahualpa, at the old vic , and it was the at the old vic, and it was the most fantastic performance . and, most fantastic performance. and, and also people like maggie smith . i absolutely adore the smith. i absolutely adore the prime of miss jean brodie. >> yeah, absolutely . >> yeah, absolutely. >> yeah, absolutely. >> but also she did some wonderful theatre and has done theatre and it's judi dench i worked with years and years ago. donald sinden. yeah. who was just wonderful actor. we did a play just wonderful actor. we did a play called london assurance in the west end and, you know, it, those actors i funny enough, i went to the theatre this week to go and see dear octopus at the national theatre and who should be there, but derek jacobi and
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of course i did. i, claudius with derek and he played claudius. >> remember that? yeah, it was quite rude back in the day. >> oh, very rude. i mean , in >> oh, very rude. i mean, in fact, my parents wouldn't let me watch, know. well, it was it watch, you know. well, it was it was something in those was quite something in those days. i played nero , days. i mean, i played nero, which i was convinced that i did. i was nero at one particular point. i've just come back as christopher biggins and i would like to be near her again, because it was it was his life was amazing. he'd have life was just amazing. he'd have about, 200 servants and that's what i'd like in life. about, 200 servants and that's what i'd like in life . now. what i'd like in life. now. >> we'll leave it there. christopher, i could chat to you all day, you know, been in programmes like porridge, you know, back the day. still know, back in the day. still watching i want to make watching now. so i want to make sure got the old sure i've got it on the old record button and say i met him. good. >> $- $— good. >> me tell you something >> but let me tell you something . that's very nice. you . you. that's very nice. you watched. it was great. we watched. it was great. but we get money i mean, get no money from it. i mean, you if we were in america, you know, if we were in america, we'd millionaires. we'd all be millionaires. but now from sir christopher . now we get from sir christopher. nice to see you. >> do not go away. because coming up next, we've got gary,
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the . so i'm back in the the cabbie. so i'm back in the cab with, gary the cabbie. great to be back with you, gary. not seen you for a few weeks, but i've had a few businesses. gary in london and, residents contact me about how businesses are being affected by these almost weekly marches in london. they've got people failing to turn up to appointments. we've got shops not taking the revenue that they normally take. it's becoming a bit of a nuisance , becoming a bit of a nuisance, isn't it? oh, totally. >> lee, it really is. it's just out every saturday or sunday there. the whole of the west end, mayfair park lane is totally blocked off. you can't get anyone to any restaurants . get anyone to any restaurants. it must be killing the businesses terribly. it's bad enough for us. it must be awful for them. >> but. but some of these businesses , gary, they're also businesses, gary, they're also scared to speak well scared to speak out as well because of fear of repercussions . you know, we see the angry mobs on the streets of london. you know, khan will argue that,
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you know, people got the right to, to protest, which they have. we know that we live in a democracy, but when it starts affecting people's livelihoods and businesses , and surely and their businesses, and surely it needs to act immediately. >> unfortunately, this country, now that i love dearly , is now that i love dearly, is becoming a country where you can't have an opinion and you can't have an opinion and you can't speak your mind. as you know from my experience, last time you say something wrong . time you say something wrong. yeah. and you jumped all. you jumped all over you can't have your own opinion in this country anymore. >> well, i'll push back a little bit. gary, i think you can have an opinion if it's that same opinion minority opinion of this noisy minority that be out on the that seems to be out on the streets single week. streets every single week. >> all right, i'll >> yeah. all right, i'll rephrase can't have rephrase that. you can't have your own opinion. it's got to be an that want to heah >> well, there you go. more common sense from gary the cabbie get cabbie and hopefully we'll get him week
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that's last orders at the bar, and i'm joined with the very lovely. the very beautiful jemma lucy, glamour model , ex lovely. the very beautiful jemma lucy, glamour model, ex on the beach, celebrity big brother. but you're privately educated. went to boarding school? yes i did. how did that pan out, well, looking back, i wish i didn't get into loads of trouble because it was kind of fun. but at the time i just wasn't sure what sort of trouble was he getting into. i was just a bit erratic. i wasn't going to school properly. going school properly. i wasn't going to i was escaping to my classes. i was escaping from yeah, things to my classes. i was escaping fronthat. yeah, things to my classes. i was escaping fronthat. a yeah, things to my classes. i was escaping fronthat. a bit yeah, things to my classes. i was escaping fronthat. a bit ysmoking,]s like that. a bit of smoking, cigarettes . cigarettes. >> okay. obviously. yeah. and then a few then became fast forward a few years, a reality tv star. years, became a reality tv star. yeah. >> glamour reality tv >> glamour model, reality tv star.i >> glamour model, reality tv star. i made an appearance on ex on the beach a couple of times, and then celebrity big brother ex on the beach. well you just go to the beach and your ex comes out of the water and just ruins life a few weeks. yeah. >> ruin your life, because my ex at the time, there was still a bit of drama. still a bit of unspoken stuff that on unspoken stuff that went on unfinished yeah yeah,
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unfinished business. yeah yeah, a little bit of friction. yeah. and then obviously put your and then obviously they put your ex new people in front of ex with new people in front of you. if you still you. and if you still have feelings, did at the feelings, which i did at the time. okay. yeah. >> so you've quite >> so you've been quite successful in gabon between the bank bit of glamour bank you do a bit of glamour modelling. yeah. modelling. onlyfans. yeah. i've been bit only a few bob. >> it's made me a lot of money. yeah, i'm kind of trying to change at minute. it's change that at the minute. it's not going to a quick process, not going to be a quick process, but started trading as but i've started trading as well, got my fingers trading. >> what are you trading in? >> what are you trading in? >> forex currency. really >> forex currency. gold really like learning like that. yeah i'm learning though. i'm learning. >> to be made? >> is it money to be made? >> is it money to be made? >> lots of money >> yeah. there's lots of money to there's you to be made. there's money you have know what you're have to, like, know what you're doing and learn and expect loss as well. >> yeah, single parent, >> but yeah, single parent, single out single parent. does that pan out with career everything? with your career and everything? >> is my >> fine. my daughter is my world. anything, changed >> fine. my daughter is my worwholennything, changed >> fine. my daughter is my worwhole life1ing, changed >> fine. my daughter is my worwhole life ,ng, changed >> fine. my daughter is my worwhole life , because hanged >> fine. my daughter is my worwhole life , because ianged >> fine. my daughter is my worwhole life , because i was d >> fine. my daughter is my worwhole life , because i was on my whole life, because i was on a bit of a wild path before, and yeah, i love being a mum, so i guess there's, maybe some young girls looking at people like you. >> see you as a bit of a role model to say, you know, this glamorous young ladies made all this but there's this money. yeah but there's some out there. surely.
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this money. yeah but there's som red out there. surely. this money. yeah but there's som red flags, out there. surely. this money. yeah but there's som red flags, any there. surely. this money. yeah but there's som red flags, any warnings'ely. this money. yeah but there's som red flags, any warnings for. any red flags, any warnings for young girls? >> what, you mean in, like, the glamour industry ? yeah, i feel glamour industry? yeah, i feel like going red like there's going to be red flags in any industry . so the flags in any industry. so the worst would say worst thing i would say is, like, people take advantage like, people can take advantage of you when you're young. i had a photographer once take advantage in a advantage of me. not in a way like just i didn't like that, but just i didn't know going on, and know what was going on, and i just things i didn't want to just did things i didn't want to do. so there can be a bit do. so yeah, there can be a bit of that going on. it's quite a male dominated industry. and of that going on. it's quite a male soninated industry. and of that going on. it's quite a male so schooli industry. and of that going on. it's quite a male so school reunions, and of that going on. it's quite a male so school reunions, do d of that going on. it's quite a male so school reunions, do you yeah, so school reunions, do you go to them? no >> do you keep in touch with your old school friends? >> i've got a couple of friends from my first boarding school, actually, apart that, actually, but apart from that, after kicked out after that one, i got kicked out of a few schools. so of quite a few schools. so i wasn't there long enough. yeah, i from five i got expelled from five schools. schools? the same schools. five schools? the same one like a, like, schools. five schools? the same onelike a, like, public >> like a, like, public nuisance, aren't you, then? pretty much . pretty much. >> yeah. i just didn't like going class. i didn't like going to class. i didn't like listening to the teacher. >> what your say >> what do your parents say you're spending this money you're spending all this money on? this one's a cash on private. >> they're in singapore. 13 >> they're in singapore. i'm 13 hours you know , hours away. yeah, and you know, they just didn't really have much me because
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much control over me because they so far away. and they were so far away. and obviously, time difference. obviously, the time difference. eight finished school 16 >> so you finished school at 16 or went to college till i or 18, i went to college till i was about 20, so i was in and out of education from 16. >> and what sort of drove you into going to reality tv? just like go online and apply or, well, for ex on the beach i got casted for somebody found me , casted for somebody found me, outside of a nightclub actually. >> but before that i was actually to brat camp, actually sent to brat camp, which is another show, but i didn't know i was going on it, so that was when i was 15, but it was on tv where sent to it was on tv where i got sent to america, behavioural america, to this behavioural camp. kind of started from camp. so it kind of started from then, though know then, even though i didn't know that was starting then. so that it was starting then. so i was . was already. >> mind me asking how old >> you mind me asking how old you now? you are now? >> 30. what do you reckon? >> i'm 30. what do you reckon? yeah, that's it. >> where do you see yourself >> and where do you see yourself in time? in ten years in ten years time? in ten years time, i would like to have a big property portfolio because i've got a small one at the minute. >> like to be completely off >> i'd like to be completely off onlyfans, probably build my trading portfolio up and just be a bit more like, what's the
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word, less? less what? only fancy . fancy. >> okay. yeah, it's a means to an end, isn't it? i suppose you know, i've got nothing against ladies or men that do that. you know. yeah. if you want to make a few quid, you've. yeah. got off your backside and done something, don't you? well, exactly. >> and, you know, before a >> and, you know, before i was a mum, i was a bit more sort of blase about now just blase about it, but now i'm just like, really the like, i don't really like the image, i'm picking image, you know, if i'm picking my up from school and my daughter up from school and as she gets older, will she get affected by or bullied, you affected by it or bullied, you know, i it's honest know, i mean, it's that honest conversation with her. >> i think >> i suppose i think it's becoming more now. becoming a lot more normal now. and time, a lot and in ten years time, a lot more people are going to on more people are going to be on it, because nobody likes it, because nobody really likes to to 5 stuck in an to do the 9 to 5 stuck in an office all the time, especially if not going anywhere. you if it's not going anywhere. you know if it's not going anywhere. you knoso yeah, so onlyfans is, >> so yeah, so onlyfans is, obviously makes few quid, obviously makes you a few quid, there's for it. we know there's a market for it. we know there's a market for it. we know there's a market for it. we know there's a market. and, you said there's a market for it. we know ticould a market. and, you said there's a market for it. we know ticould make ket. and, you said there's a market for it. we know ticould make a t. and, you said there's a market for it. we know ticould make a fewnd, you said there's a market for it. we know ticould make a few quid)u said there's a market for it. we know ticould make a few quid onsaid there's a market for it. we know ticould make a few quid on there 100. >> i'll sign you up. really? you can my roof. i'll teach can go under my roof. i'll teach you to do it. you how to do it. >> i'll make a few quid there. yeah look, you live in central london, you live near to
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westminster? actually. live in westminster? yeah. i work there on basis. any on a weekly basis. yeah, any interest in politics at all? >> i am interested in it. but where i was in and out of school so much, i didn't really sort of fit into the curriculum where people about i know i people learn about it. i know i could learned about in could have learned about it in as buti could have learned about it in as but i was as i got older, but i was messing but i do like messing around. but i do like it. but sometimes feel it. but sometimes i just feel like i passionate about like i get passionate about things, if i can't control things, and if i can't control it, me. and just. >> so is your daughter at school now? yes. how old is she? >> she's four. >> she's four. >> she's four. >> she's she starts >> she's four. so she starts messing around at school like mother what are you mother did. what are you going to to to say to her? >> i'm going to have a different approach. sort of approach. i'm going to sort of with i messed around, i with me. when i messed around, i was just off, girl, was just told off, naughty girl, go whatever . whereas go home, leave whatever. whereas with my daughter, if she's naughty, i'm going to sit her down and talk to her and try and understand i don't understand why. and i don't think it's that bad if you're a bit naughty at anyway, bit naughty at school anyway, but be a bit naughty. >> it's part of growing up, so i've got here for a reason. gemma. doing the paw. gemma. we're doing on the paw. we do every single week. we do it every single week. we've pull a pint in we've got to pull a pint in in
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30s a perfect pint and you've got little bit of competition got a little bit of competition today. got, webb. today. we've got, emma webb. where here, where are you? emma come here, darling. so that's your. you've got and got got the fosters and you've got the call. so, on the count of three. oh oh, is it a race? it's a race, and it's a a race, okay. and it's a competition for the quality of point. one. point. yeah. three. two. one. go! done before ? go! have you done this before? >> i have, yes, i've got a bit of experience. >> i've got a ringer in the room. what about you, emma, well, you must have done it before, and it didn't turn out very well. >> okay . >> okay. >> okay. >> so you went behind the bar, gemma? >> yes. okay. a bit of head on that. yeah. >> all right. but plonked on the bar, darling . bar, darling. >> it's actually not too bad . >> it's actually not too bad. >> it's actually not too bad. >> what's that? >> what's that? >> well, all the head. >> yeah . >> yeah. >> yeah. >> so, emma, you've been listening to gemma talking about her career, and she's done pretty well, hasn't she? you know, being a glamour model, doing onlyfans reality tv stuff now. got a few bob in the bank. there's something that you'd support that sort of career. >> i'm not supportive of onlyfans, i have to admit. and
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i'd only just heard about the show ex on the beach. never even heard of it, so i'm completely oblivious to all of that. see, i'm a ignorant these i'm a bit ignorant on these things, you know, these reality tv i don't watch tv, so i >> i don't watch much tv, so i don't get much time. so when these ladies come in and they've been show and that show, been on this show and that show, i ignorant. so yeah, i i am a bit ignorant. so yeah, i do about that. but do do apologise about that. but do you the and the right you believe in the and the right for do they want for women to do what they want on these, these on these, on these shows, morally right. like >> morally right. i feel like a bit a nun right now. yeah, bit of a nun right now. yeah, yeah, yeah. no, i don't yeah, yeah. but no, i don't i don't think that i don't agree with, selling body in any respect. >> okay. what do you do? can i ask, i do this, okay, all sorts of different things. politics. >> there's a lot of politics we're trying to get, gemma interested in politics, but i'm a big believer. >> distinctly not only fans. >> distinctly not only fans. >> yeah, well, i can click my fingers and make loads of money being a politician. >> i would, but i just didn't have the upbringing where i kind of felt like that was a way i could go. so i wish i could
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stand there and what you're stand there and say what you're saying, can't. saying, but i can't. >> definitely poor >> i definitely rather be poor than onlyfans. >> i definitely rather be poor tha well, )nlyfans. >> i definitely rather be poor tha well, i, lyfans. >> i definitely rather be poor tha well, i, i'mns. >> i definitely rather be poor tha well, i, i'mns big believer >> well, i, i'm a big believer in to their own. in each to their own. >> got a problem with >> i ain't got a problem with it. that's probably area it. that's probably one area where disagree with where we probably disagree with each believe people each other. i believe people should do they should be able to do what they want with own body, and want with their own body, and that's that's just me that's just me. that's just me even transitioning. >> there yet? >> lee, are we there yet? >> lee, are we there yet? >> look, i believe a man is a man and a woman is a woman. if a man and a woman is a woman. if a man wants to live as a woman, that's up to him, but for me, it's still a man, if he wants to be called chef, probably. be called a chef, probably. that's enough. but, you that's fair enough. but, you know, of day, know, at the end of the day, people be allowed live people should be allowed to live their get on their own lives and get get on with it. but i'm going to score the now and, gemma, the points now and, gemma, i want to give you a ten. >> thanks. >> thanks. >> is the head's >> my head is the head's collapsed bit. it's collapsed a little bit. it's like a poorly prepared soup. like collapsed into like it's just collapsed into it. i want to give you nine. >> i think my dad would be very proud of me. very proud of you. >> but that's on the poor with emma and gemma. thanks, guys. >> thank you. >> thank you. >> thanks for watching >> massive thanks for watching lea anderson's real world once again. we're back next week. friday on gb news.
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friday night, 7 pm. on gb news. but coming up next, we've got friday night live with mark dolan, mark, what's occurring ? in. >> oh, what a brilliant show from lee. but listen, we've got a very busy show. it's mark dolan and friday night live. was this the week the tories lost the general election? also, has the general election? also, has the princess kate photo row permanently damaged? the royal family has it affected catherine's reputation as well ? catherine's reputation as well? what about this one? should diane abbott be accepted back into the labour party and is woke madness finally in retreat? we've got some big names. we've got, radio and fleet street
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legend mike porky parry, we've got the fabulous nina myskow and the former royal butler to diana himself, the wonderful paul burrell. plus, why are school dinners still so bad? i'll be asking antony worrall thompson, asking antony worrall thompson, a really busy show friday night live with me, mark dolan. don't go anywhere. >> that warm feeling inside from boxt boiler as sponsors of weather on gb news. >> hello. very good evening to you. welcome to your latest gb news weather update brought to you by the met office. for many of it's actually going to of us, it's actually going to turn chilly tonight. turn quite chilly tonight. could be of before some be a touch of frost before some rain tomorrow. that's in rain arrives tomorrow. that's in association a system association with a system waiting out in the atlantic. before that, though, do have waiting out in the atlantic. b�*ridge that, though, do have waiting out in the atlantic. b�*ridge that, thcpressure do have a ridge of high pressure building, to building, and that's going to quieten as we quieten our weather down as we go end of day. go through the end of the day. so many daytime showers so many of the daytime showers will away and die out, will clear away and die out, leaving mostly dry and often leaving a mostly dry and often clear night. as a result,
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because the clear skies and because of the clear skies and a bit of a northerly wind, temperatures will take a bit of a drop. it's going to be markedly colder than some recent nights. touch of frost is possible, particularly in rural spots, possible, particularly in rural sp scotland. we go through of scotland. as we go through tomorrow watch out of scotland. as we go through ton a rrow watch out of scotland. as we go through tona few watch out of scotland. as we go through tona few pockets watch out of scotland. as we go through tona few pockets of watch out of scotland. as we go through tona few pockets of mistch out of scotland. as we go through tona few pockets of mist and it for a few pockets of mist and fog. first thing, once these clear lots of fine sunny weather across and eastern across northern and eastern parts, towards the south and parts, but towards the south and west here we are going to see clouds spilling its way in, but this won't really reach northern and until in and eastern parts until later in the afternoon. some wet weather around at times, around could be heavy at times, particularly northern particularly across northern ireland, but after a chilly start, temperatures rising so most likely to get most places likely to get into double any wet weather double figures. any wet weather clears through as we go through early on sunday, so a bit of a wet start across some southeastern parts perhaps, but thereafter for sunday actually looks scattering looks largely dry. a scattering of showers for sure, and also some outbreaks of more persistent rain across parts of scotland and northern ireland. but most of us will see some sunny breaks. monday doesn't but most of us will see some sunntoo eaks. monday doesn't but most of us will see some sunntoo wet, monday doesn't but most of us will see some sunntoo wet, butnday doesn't but most of us will see some sunntoo wet, but further esn't but most of us will see some sunntoo wet, but further raint look too wet, but further rain is for tuesday. is on the cards for tuesday. i'll soon. bye
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bye. >> looks like things are heating up. boxt boilers sponsors of weather on . gb news. weather on. gb news. >> join me camilla tominey every sunday at 930 when i'll be interviewing the key players in british politics and taking them to this report. to task in this report. basically says that he's not fit to stand trial with an upcoming election looming over westminster, the time for westminster, now is the time for clear agree, clear, honest answers. i agree, and precisely what i'll and that's precisely what i'll get. is he indecisive? incompetent that's the camilla tominey show at 930 every sunday on gb news, the people's channel on gb news, the people's channel, britain's election . channel. >> gb news is the home of free speech. we were created to champion it and we deliver it day in, day out. free speech allows us all to explore and debate openly the issues most important to us, our families and of course, the british people having challenging conversations to enlighten each other. >> which is why we hear all
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>> 2024 a battleground year. >> 2024 a battleground year. >> the year the nation decides. >> the year the nation decides. >> as the parties gear up their campaigns for the next general election. >> who will be left standing when the british people make one of decisions of of the biggest decisions of their lives? who will rise and who will fall? let's find out together. >> for every moment. the highs, the lows, the twists and turns. >> we'll you for every >> we'll be with you for every step of this journey in 2024. >> gb news is britain's election . channel. >> good evening. it is 8:00 from the world headquarters of gb
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news. this is friday night live with me, dolan. was this with me, mark dolan. was this the the tories lost the the week the tories lost the election? has the princess kate photo row permanently damaged the royal family? should diane abbott be accepted back into the labour party and is woke? madness finally in retreat? this is friday night live with me, mark dolan. bring your own drinks. the admission is . drinks. the admission is. free. and i couldn't hope for two finer friday friends of more superior pedigree than legends of fleet street . mike porky of fleet street. mike porky parry and nina bischoff , plus parry and nina bischoff, plus former royal butler paul burrell . and what has been a challenging week for the royals . challenging week for the royals. our top westminster insider, the express online's fearless political editor david maddox, and the tv chefs antony and king of the tv chefs antony worrall thompson. my friday big
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opinion is on the way. my first on air reaction to lee anderson's defection to reform uk , a crisis for mcdonald's and uk, a crisis for mcdonald's and the woke tide is turning all of that after the news headlines and sophia wenzler. >> mark thank you. i'm sophia wenzler in the gb newsroom . wenzler in the gb newsroom. former prime minister liz truss has accused labour of preventing a debate on her bill, which seeks to ban transgender women from female only spaces and prevent them from competing in women's sports. it was due to be discussed in the commons today, but mps appear to waste time to delay her debate. she told gb news she was frustrated by the opposition parties stalling tactics. my bill has been stopped today from being debated by the labour party and i am absolutely furious about that. >> they do not even want to talk about the importance of
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recognising biological sex.

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