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tv   Headliners  GB News  March 16, 2024 5:00am-6:01am GMT

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but the first day has been >> but the first day has been marked by disruption, including dye being poured into ballot boxes and a molotov cocktail thrown at a polling station in putin's hometown. ballots are being cast over three days, even though vladimir putin is all but certain to win. though vladimir putin is all but certain to win . police say certain to win. 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 police described it as a truly awful incident. two people arrested on a number of offences have been released on bail as enquiries continue. a manhunt is underway after two people were injured in a suspected crossbow attack in central london. the met police say a man and a woman were shot with a crossbow in
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separate but linked attacks. the 44 year old woman were struck in the head , and a 20 year old man the head, and a 20 year old man in the neck within 200ft of each other. both victims were treated for their injuries in hospital and have since been discharged. officers are carrying out urgent work to identify a suspect , and work to identify a suspect, and thousands of drivers will be stuck in gridlocked traffic this weekend during an unprecedented closure of the m25. drivers are being warned to stay away from a five mile stretch in surrey between junctions ten and 11, which has been shut until 6 am. on monday. it's the first scheduled daytime all lanes shutdown of the m25 since it 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 time for headliners .
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for headliners. >> hello and welcome to headliners >> i'm cressida wetton and joining me tonight are gb news answer to jedward. it's josh howie and leo kearse . how are howie and leo kearse. how are you guys.7 >> we don't have the hair. >> we don't have the hair. >> well you could, you could re you could distribute move some around. >> yes i'll take some of yours. thank you. that's what i do. >> that's what i did. >> that's what i did. >> you did didn't you.7 yeah. >> you did didn't you? yeah. looking fantastic. >> i've still got all mine on the back of my head. >> if anyone can see looks. yes, it's still there. the mullet looking great, guys. >> great. smooth start. all right, look at right, let's have a look at those front pages. so the daily mail goes with plot to crown morden as pm. the telegraph has mercer faces jail over afghan inquiry. the times has church playing race card and inews has deliveroo and uber eats back door to illegal migration. indian express has hunt's olive branch to fearful pensioners. and finally, the daily star
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mystery of the rampant beavers. and those were your front pages . and those were your front pages. okay, kicking things off with the daily mail. josh? yeah plot to crown morton as pm. >> so yeah, the tories are getting desperate. they're all about to be out of a job in a couple of months, and they just want to do one last spin of the wheel if they can wheel just to see if they can finally an electable finally get on an electable leader, i don't think it's going to any good. they've they've to do any good. they've they've landed on penny mordaunt. she has skills. she wears has a lot of skills. she wears a cape. well, she can carry a sword. and admittedly she those used to be very useful skills when it came to running the country. unfortunately now there are other things that are required as well, like recognising what a woman is. >> well, i mean, apparently she's good at diving as well. did you know that? i didn't know that. found that out. >> okay, well, apparently she's got my vote on some celebrity splash programme, isn't splash programme, which isn't as dirty it sounds.
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dirty as it sounds. >> sorry, so, thoughts? >> sorry, so, leo. thoughts? >> sorry, so, leo. thoughts? >> yeah. >> sorry, so, leo. thoughts? >> ymean, i think, i think at >> i mean, i think, i think at this point, i mean, with rishi, they're down, this point, i mean, with rishi, thewhy down, this point, i mean, with rishi, thewhy not? down, this point, i mean, with rishi, thewhy not? not down, this point, i mean, with rishi, thewhy not? not gamble? so why not? why not gamble? why not the mystery not see what's in the mystery box? go for penny morton? box? if we go for penny morton? the thing that sort of undermines of how much undermines the sort of how much people penny people really believe that penny is lead the party is the person to lead the party to victory, says the mystery source there's source says that there's a feeling that we cannot go, go on as we and that even penny as we are, and that even penny would be better. but wow, sounds like believe in her. like you really believe in her. >> that's fantastic. >> that's fantastic. >> i think that they're being >> i do think that they're being silly. i the person silly. i think the only person who genuinely would have a chance kemi badenoch . chance would be kemi badenoch. yeah, even now she yeah, but she even now she i mean, because she has good communication skills. she's plain speaking. she says it as it is. i don't necessarily agree with everything that she says. certainly agree on some the certainly agree on some of the stuff about like knowing what a woman for woman is and fighting for women's rights , but she seems to women's rights, but she seems to be communicator and be a good communicator and against someone like keir starmer, who i know you guys have different feelings about, but i think he has positive qualities as well. i don't think
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communication. i just say i just don't think his communication is necessarily the of his skills. >> no. imagine getting trapped in a with of them. in a lift with one of them. wouldn't rather be trapped wouldn't you rather be trapped with wouldn't you rather be trapped witiwell, actually, >> well, actually, one of my fantasies . but i think penny fantasies is. but i think penny mordaunt, she's getting too much stick for, for, you know, taking her overly woke view on what a woman is , you know, because woman is, you know, because because we've got to remember a couple ago, nobody knew couple of years ago, nobody knew what woman was. everybody was what a woman was. everybody was running like, running around being like, what's nobody knows? what's a woman? nobody knows? keir like, don't keir starmer is like, i don't know, got penises? know, have they got penises? have elephant ears? have they got big elephant ears? have they got big elephant ears? have got 20 legs and walk have they got 20 legs and walk like a centipede? had any like a centipede? nobody had any idea. you know, i don't think idea. so you know, i don't think we can judge her by the standards of 16 months ago, we would to know that would at least want to know that she's firmer opinion now, she's got a firmer opinion now, wouldn't we? >> think still >> well, i think that she still does towards that side. and does lie towards that side. and they're saying that the only way that let her in as that they'll let her in as leader hands all of leader is if she hands all of that over to the more that stuff over to the more right of party. yeah, but right of the party. yeah, but it's that it's right it's amazing that it's a right wing the talk to the weapons, >> so the talk to the weapons, the party going to have the tory party are going to have a party to a woman as wing of the party to decide a committee, a woman
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decide that a committee, a woman is committee . decide that a committee, a woman is committee. right. >> favour? >> all in favour? >> all in favour? >> get there in the end. >> i'll get there in the end. >> i'll get there in the end. >> moving to the aillio. >> so the ai has surprisingly, great bit of investigative journalism by ai . so journalism by the ai. so deliveroo and uber eats are a back door to uk illegal migration. obviously they should be coming to the front door, with the food. but yeah, apparently thousands of these, the riders accounts . so if you the riders accounts. so if you want to deliver food for, for deliveroo or uber eats or whatever, you can actually just sell or rent out your, your, your sort of past to, to do that to other people. and there are over 100,000 people on facebook groups doing this is really is really shocking and it's unsafe . really shocking and it's unsafe. you know, often the riders don't have the insurance. it's apparently the responsibility of the rider who holds the account to make sure that whoever the renting the account to does, obviously they're not going to do it, you know what i mean? like, i think they've got like, i don't think they've got an department, do they. an hr department, do they. >> don't actually deliveroo do.
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>> but these individual riders don't, have don't, some people have complained, as well as the insurance the fact insurance issue and the fact that it's enabling illegal migration you come migration because you can come over and rent one of these passes to deliver food for deliveroo without somebody in the country. >> what you're saying is they haven't got any papers, they can't anywhere they can't go anywhere else, they can't go anywhere else, they can't a real can't get on a decent a real payroll somewhere. any number. >> deliveroo bill. yeah. for 70, £70 a week or something, you can get deliveroo account, £70 a week or something, you can get deliveroo account , rent get a deliveroo account, rent a deliveroo account and then deliver deliver food. but obviously been obviously you haven't been through safety training. through any safety training. you've your you've still got all your attitudes bringing attitudes that you're bringing from medieval country attitudes that you're bringing from coming medieval country attitudes that you're bringing from coming from eval country attitudes that you're bringing from coming from to, l country attitudes that you're bringing from coming from to, to ountry attitudes that you're bringing from coming from to, to to, itry women. >> so, you know, this woman have some poor customer service or this, this woman because she like groceries using deliveroo. >> turns up at her door >> some guy turns up at her door and he's all like, you're pretty lovely lady and all this sort of stuff. sorry for doing the accent, but you know, beautiful girl, beautiful girl, indian beautiful girl, lovely . no, he's scottish. lovely girl. no, he's scottish. >> i think the language you're supposed to use, he made her feel unsafe uncomfortable. feel unsafe or uncomfortable. >> feel >> yeah, he made her feel uncomfortable. but becker .
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uncomfortable. but then becker. obviously real name. who obviously not a real name. who did for? did you vote did you vote for? did you vote for liberal parties? they're all for liberal parties? they're all for open borders . and anybody for open borders. and anybody can come here. and anything that floats, it's yeah, you floats, it's like, yeah, you made made happen, made you made this happen, becker. and now it's happening to you learnt your to you. have you learnt your lesson? to you. have you learnt your les:|»n? for becker. think >> i feel for becker. i think she'd probably rather have that deliveroo arrive, though, she'd probably rather have that deliv leo�* arrive, though, she'd probably rather have that deliv leo grillingarrive, though, she'd probably rather have that delivleo grilling here, though, she'd probably rather have that delivleo grilling her aboutrgh, she'd probably rather have that delivleo grilling her about her than leo grilling her about her politics. that would be more. >> there's a bunch of reasons why is a bad idea. this why this is a bad idea. this isn't actually, i don't believe it uncovered it was them who first uncovered this. the this. it was covered in the newspaper. have story, newspaper. we have this story, but guess they've into but i guess they've looked into it more. but yeah, of it a bit more. but yeah, of course. safety, anybody course. women's safety, anybody every. know, i get home every. you know, when i get home from from order from work, from here, i'll order an whatever. and an uber eats or whatever. and it's someone who's it's always someone who's different, there's also different, but there's also this idea could even be, idea that they could even be, like, part of a modern slavery gang, and they're sort of being sent out there, so there's a bunch reasons they need bunch of reasons why they need to obviously down on this. to obviously clamp down on this. but me, biggest issue is but for me, the biggest issue is do you tip in cash and then don't tip because on the app. but then it looks like you're cheap on the app. that's that .
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cheap on the app. that's that. >> that's the real dilemma here. >> that's the real dilemma here. >> i can't believe you're asking me about tipping . you never tip. me about tipping. you never tip. >> really. you never stop. i always deliveroo you've already got to pay loads of money for it. >> and also. like what? like i just found out that, you know, they're not even . they're they're not even. they're cheating the home office. i was i was intrigued to. they interviewed some of the riders who said, well, i went to the home and presented all home office and presented all my documents, the office documents, and the home office said i was like, wow, that's said no. i was like, wow, that's amazing. the home office actually doing their jobs for once. to the point once. i mean, not to the point of actually , you know, making of actually, you know, making illegal people home. illegal people go home. >> i can hope, the >> i can only hope, okay, the time's are they going with? >> josh church playing race card , x equality tsar criticises cvs slavery fund says britain is slavery fund and says britain is less divided than 40 years ago. so this is lord sewell, he he headed up the boris johnson's commission on race and ethnic disparities. he's got a book coming called black success coming out called black success the , and he was the surprising truth, and he was really sort of, made into a villain by members of black
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community, not all the black community, not all the black community, because it's a disparate group, but as as and sort of actually, there was quite a lot of racism directed towards him because the results that they found in didn't meet people's expectations, i.e. the uk wasn't the most racist place in the whole world. and actually money that how much money you're born into has a much bigger impact, it's not that race plays no impact. but anyway , the point no impact. but anyway, the point is he's we covered the story. how the church of england, they they sort of they said, we're going to give 100 million because you know, happened because you know, what happened back the day. and then they back in the day. and then they 90, back in the day. and then they go, well actually we're going to give billion, but it won't give it a billion, but it won't be our money. it will just be some christians. who be our money. it will just be som guilty. christians. who be our money. it will just be sontheyty. christians. who be our money. it will just be sonthey the zhristians. who be our money. it will just be son they the church, s. who be our money. it will just be son they the church, s. vgot >> they the church, they've got a few quid put by for this sort of eventuality. yeah. and i guess they are an institution that, that depends on guilt. >> so you can understand, understand this. i the understand this. but i think the whole idea reparations is, is whole idea of reparations is, is ridiculous. they're taking money from people who haven't done anything wrong give it to anything wrong to give it to people. people didn't
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people. who? those people didn't do anything to them. >> that's isn't. how do you. i mean, if you if you have a half african heritage and a half european, what do you do? give yourself it's really i yourself £50. it's really i don't how you. don't know how you. >> this, this is the, >> but this, this is the, the, the whole sort of idea, the philosophy that reparations in genders also means that, so if you're saying that people now are responsible for for the, the bad things their ancestors did, you're also saying that people now can claim to all the good things that their ancestors did. so, you know, as a scot, you know, the invention of the television, the invention of antibiotics, nobody gets use antibiotics, nobody gets to use any them giving me any of them without giving me loads money. loads of money. >> well, seems entirely >> well, that seems entirely reasonable. finally paid reasonable. and finally paid money. let's have a quick money. yeah, let's have a quick look at the star. leo. >> oh, the star. so the star has damned if we know how they got here. that's a little pun, because it's the mystery of the rampant beavers. so there are beavers in cornwall, they don't have waxing salons, and have enough waxing salons, and nobody knows how they got here.
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and beavers are super cute. and they did want to reintroduce beavers to the wild, in britain, after decades of the hollywood, and hell. and they're super cute animals , but they do knock down animals, but they do knock down trees and dam dam , rivers. trees and dam dam, rivers. >> so you get we don't. you're like a nature documentary . like a nature documentary. >> sort of a very, very badly informed one. >> reading, reading off. >> reading, reading off. >> we don't know how they got there. they didn't go by train. >> no, but it turns out they're in the perfect area. well for them, don't what the them, i don't know what the beavers to think. beavers are going to think. well, were talking well, but they were talking about them anyway. well, but they were talking abii'm them anyway. well, but they were talking abii'm thinking them anyway. well, but they were talking abii'm thinking someone anyway. well, but they were talking abii'm thinking someone maybe i. well, but they were talking ab i've seen i've definitely seen seen in canada. seen i've seen them in canada. >> okay. >> okay. >> well, and the internet. >> well, and on the internet. right. for the front right. that's it for the front pages. the break.
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welcome back to headliners. i'm still chris whitten, and i'm joined by one comedian who thinks kate is still alive. it's josh howie and another who is suspiciously certain that she's not. and it's leo kearse. okay let's start with some bad news for people who love sick notes and being dramatic in saturday's telegraph. >> josh, yes, is no such >> josh, yes, there is no such thing as long covid, say health officials . please do not tweet officials. please do not tweet me after this show and start
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going. you're a liar. you're you're a big pharma owns you or whatever it is, or they'll probably actually wake up tomorrow, won't they? but, yes, they're saying here, this is, in queensland, australia. they've looked at the results and they're basically saying there's no such thing as long covid per se. been se. what people have been suffering from a real suffering from is a real phenomenon, it's what phenomenon, but it's what happens in a post, viral happens like in a post, viral syndrome. right. >> so we're not denying their symptoms. there are symptoms . symptoms. there are symptoms. yes, but we are denying that it's that it's specially. >> yeah. to covid. the >> yeah. to a covid. and the reason like a lot reason why it seems like a lot of haveitis reason why it seems like a lot of have it is because, of of people have it is because, of course, lots of people got covid if louis schaefer i if it exists. louis schaefer i met him, at same time. so met him, at the same time. so that why it seems like it's that is why it seems like it's a real phenomenon. but if you had a or a cold, may have a flu or a cold, you may have similar symptoms. and they would a flu or a cold, you may have simi|continue oms. and they would a flu or a cold, you may have simi|continue for;. and they would a flu or a cold, you may have simi|continue for a and they would a flu or a cold, you may have simi|continue for a long:hey would a flu or a cold, you may have simi|continue for a long timevould afterwards. >> and also you have the >> and also you can have the sort psychosomatic effect of sort of psychosomatic effect of everybody's about long sort of psychosomatic effect of everbeor's about long sort of psychosomatic effect of everbeo then about long sort of psychosomatic effect of everbeo then you're bout long sort of psychosomatic effect of everbeo then you're like, long covid. so then you're like, well, feel rough. so well, i feel a bit rough. so i've got long covid as well. >> well, isn't it interesting that this is in australia because they talked about covid an they? they an awful lot, didn't they? they were keen on it.
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were very keen on it. >> i've got long gonorrhoea that's gonorrhoea . that's long gonorrhoea. >> a pirate? but, >> wasn't he a pirate? but, my friend gaynor, she , she works friend gaynor, she, she works frontline the nhs. and she frontline in the nhs. and she got covid early. early on. got it really bad, you know, back when there weren't vaccines or even , ppe or masks or anything. even, ppe or masks or anything. she's just, you know, thrown into the pit with all the masses and yeah, she got, she got long covid and attacked, it's weird like long covid. it seems to attack different parts of your body. know viruses body. i didn't know viruses could, target different could, like, target different parts of your body. she's. she's had problems inflammation parts of your body. she's. she's ha her oblems inflammation parts of your body. she's. she's ha her cartilage inflammation parts of your body. she's. she's ha her cartilage and nflammation parts of your body. she's. she's ha her cartilage and nfla sortstion in her cartilage and all sorts of stuff, so people, some of stuff, so some people, some people have had have had it. >> yeah. three, 3% of the population, 3% of the population. >> and is in australia or >> and this is in australia or the uk, the same in the uk. yeah. but really they're just trying you're not that special. >> do you think this is going to force been force people who maybe have been on time to, to on the sick for some time to, to have re—evaluate? are sick. >> it's just it's yeah. long long post—viral syndrome or whatever. >> yeah. okay. fair enough . the >> yeah. okay. fair enough. the times now, and it turns out thick people were more likely to get covid. have i read that
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right? >> well, it's one way of interpreting the data. how interpreting the data. so how covid made the world stupider. that's, it's also made headlines. >> stupid, stupid stupid. >> stupid, stupid stupid. >> i said you wouldn't do the voice, both of you. >> that's just my voice. just my voice . anyway, a study suggests voice. anyway, a study suggests that the disease led that exposure to the disease led to brain fog and a drop in iq. so this was they didn't mean to. they weren't looking for the for these results. this is adam hampshire at imperial college in january 2020. he started surveying 80,000 people, to see how changing lifestyle would affect brain function. and obviously something happened that changed lifestyle quite a lot. quite a lot with covid friends in china. >> i mean, this is a hell of coincidence. >> with covid, we also lockdown. i think lockdown made people stupid. but yeah, he's found that, those who people who ended up care had an iq up in intensive care had an iq about points lower about nine points lower afterwards. if that afterwards. i don't know if that comes if boris is going to comes back. if boris is going to con better. ris is going to comes back. if boris is going to conbetter. those areis going to comes back. if boris is going to con better. those are persistent get better. those are persistent symptoms six points lower. symptoms about six points lower. and even those had mild and even those who just had mild infections a couple iq infections were a couple of iq
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points they started points before where they started out , but points before where they started out, but yeah, i think lockdown made people stupid as well. everybody to trust the everybody seemed to trust the government, is of government, which is a sign of complete we threw away complete idiocy. we threw away the economy and we threw away all rights , you know, just all our rights, you know, just because of some survivable disease. >> it's quite a shock, wasn't it? had all these people it? you had all these people in your thought your your life, you thought your mates, could chat to mates, and you could chat to them about stuff, and you said, oh, you know, government overreach. and they all went, no, what? it's fine. >> it incredible see, and >> it was incredible to see, and to but yeah. so china has to do it, but yeah. so china has basically made us dumber. and it's the effect, know, i'm it's the effect, you know, i'm already pretty dumb. so i need all those little three points that can get, but as a that i can get, but as a population of the planet, this that i can get, but as a popu havei of the planet, this that i can get, but as a popu have an the planet, this that i can get, but as a popu have an impact net, this that i can get, but as a popu have an impact on , this that i can get, but as a popu have an impact on us,is that i can get, but as a popu have an impact on us, and does have an impact on us, and it's also worse if you got the original strain, which i got and, it's, i, you know, i couldn't even finish the rest of the story if it was too difficult. >> okay, back to saturday's telegraph now. and we all know what happens in vegas is subject to strict controls. and staff must prove their stay was
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necessary and provided value for the taxpayer. that's how it goes , isn't it, josh? >> exactly. mod chiefs spend millions on luxury hotels. so, yeah, the ministry of defence, they. this is the telegraph doing a bit of investigation . so doing a bit of investigation. so basically they're like well obviously what's happened recently is the mod are desperately trying to get more for , money for our armed for, money for our armed services. and the telegraph got you know, i wonder how much they spend on the old hotels. it turns out they spend a lot of money. >> don't know about the premier inn. >> do they know they certainly don't. vegas, new york, hawaii , don't. vegas, new york, hawaii, dubal don't. vegas, new york, hawaii, dubai, caribbean. and they're staying in, like, £350 a night, there's one in dubai that's £5,000 a night. so >> so six nights. >> so six nights. >> oh, is it for six nights? >> oh, is it for six nights? >> whatever. oh, they didn't say none of us. >> that was the one i stayed at. i forgot, so, yeah, the question is, of course, are we getting the value money? but also the value for money? but also the value for money? but also the age old debate, do we really want staying a want our officials staying in a hostel something? hostel or something? >> yes. >> i bet it's yes. >> the thing is , if the if
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>> well, the thing is, if the if the stay the laverda hotel in the stay at the laverda hotel in dubai for five grand, they're not going to to back to not going to want to go back to their they're their barracks. they're not going in their going to be happy in their little, bunk bed thing. >> you don't think they have a nice uplifting few days and they go refreshed and to do go back refreshed and able to do better for the nation. better work for the nation. >> i don't know, ijust better work for the nation. >> i don't know, i just think these posh hotels, these fancy hotels, should be kept for cross—channel hotels, should be kept for crohardworking members of our for hardworking members of our defence. >> excellent. good stuff . leo, >> excellent. good stuff. leo, three stories in. and i'm already delighted that someone who believes in gravity and western medicine is covering this story and not louis. it's the daily mail. leo. >> so, global cancer phenomenon. it's not just america, the uk, japan , south africa and japan, south africa and australia are among dozens of countries suffering mystery spikes of all kinds of tumours and young people. so these aren't spiky tumours. they're seeing a lot of , tumours in seeing a lot of, tumours in young people. and i was thinking, oh, well, what's happened over the last few years? what have we suddenly injected ? everybody. but it's injected? everybody. but it's not do that, apparently, not to do with that, apparently, because measuring because this is measuring between 2019. so cases
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between 1990 and 2019. so cases of cancer and young people across the globe have increased by nearly 80% and deaths have risen nearly 30. so this is i mean, this is pretty huge. so they're looking at, you know, what possible issues could it be, obesity is one of them, alcohol intake they think is a is another which that's coming down in young people's hopefully that's unfortunately my generation. we were just getting absolutely loaded all the time. and interestingly the and also interestingly the microbiome , like all the microbiome, like all the bacteria and stuff that live in your body, the thing when that gets disrupted that can cause inflammation, lead to inflammation, which can lead to cancen inflammation, which can lead to cancer. also looking at cancer. and also looking at genes, there be genes, they say there could be genetic causes. it's like your genes change, like genes don't change, like people's didn't change people's genes didn't change between 1990 and 2019. you could have a gene that, once it's stuffed full of modern life, might come in, i don't know, full of modern life. >> you'd have something like a how was that date the other day ? how was that date the other day? >> how cruel, how cruel, but yes, it's, they don't mention here forever. plastics that was
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where my brain went to straight away. yes, but yeah. and it's interesting that australia seems to have the highest number of early onset cancer and new zealand second, but they don't mention you would think that might be skin cancer or something. it's we're something. but no, it's we're talking cancer. talking about breast cancer. >> colon australia are a nation of aren't they. sorry of fatties aren't they. sorry australia. good australia. they've got a good shape. they're they've shape. no they're not. they've got very obesity levels. got very high obesity levels. yeah. in good shape. yeah. they're not in good shape. and a drink don't and they love a drink don't they. >> again how that date . did >> again how is that date. did you date in australia or something? >> i didn't date in australia. >> i didn't date in australia. >> lot of information there. >> they've also got i was in tasmania and you get bug splat and windscreen. they've and the windscreen. so they've still know we're in still got, you know how we're in the west. you never get bugs splattered yourwindscreen splattered on your windscreen anymore eliminated splattered on your windscreen anymore life eliminated splattered on your windscreen anymore life our eliminated splattered on your windscreen anymore life our neonic1ated splattered on your windscreen anyrnicotinamide our neonic1ated splattered on your windscreen anyrnicotinamide , our neonic1ated splattered on your windscreen anyrnicotinamide , phosphatesated splattered on your windscreen anyrnicotinamide , phosphates and and nicotinamide, phosphates and whatever it is. >> i hadn't noticed that. >> i hadn't noticed that. >> so , so, yeah, in tasmania, >> so, so, yeah, in tasmania, you've still got that sort of natural life . and so it's weird natural life. and so it's weird that they're having such high levels of cancer with, you know, still living in a sort of, you know, healthy environment. >> well, that's the good news is
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that uk so it's the that the uk 28th. so it's the first time that being rubbish at something actually us out. >> couldn't be lower. okay, back to telegraph , see, hamas to the telegraph, see, hamas just permanent ceasefire . just want a permanent ceasefire. that's all they want. any thoughts on this, josh? >> yeah. israel talks with hamas back. oh sorry. israel talks with hamas back on as terror group drops permanent ceasefire demand. there's been a back and forth america particularly was was very, biden really wanted to get the ceasefire in place before ramadan . it didn't before ramadan. it didn't happen. and finally, hamas have gone. yeah. all right. we'll go back to say, well , they've taken back to say, well, they've taken the permanent ceasefire off. they're talking about exchanging £1,000 terrorists, murderers for 100 civilians and babies , and 100 civilians and babies, and women and old people, but israel obviously wants to get its hostages back, but but i would say that a big part of this is because, they have hamas in a in
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a bad position. they've killed reportedly two thirds of their battalions, about 20,000 people, although according to hamas, they've killed none . no one, they've killed none. no one, just civilians, but this is this is you have to be in a position of strength to get to this point. >> right. so you're saying netanyahu's winning at this point? >> well, they've they've they've got so far , i wouldn't say it's got so far, i wouldn't say it's netanyahu. whoever was the prime a lot of people go, oh, netanyahu, he's the evil one. it's like no country would have an option but to do what israel has whoever the leader has done. whoever the leader was, well, what the west usually do say, oh, don't back do is say, oh, don't look back in anger. >> and it'll all be fine. it's the religion of peace. and if anybody they're racist. >> terrible y-i >> i feel terrible for the families of hostages . we families of the hostages. we made it to the break in one piece. coming up, sexist air con german humza yousaf german robots and humza yousaf battles landed battles the scottish landed gentry.
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welcome back to headliners. kicking off this section with saturday's telegraph. we learned that in her own words, susie dent gets cold at the drop of a hat. should she pick the hat up, put it back on and maybe get a jumper? leo. >> yeah, absolutely. we count down sexism row. as susie dent suggests , studio air suggests, studio air conditioning favours men. so suggests, studio air condi'revealed vours men. so
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suggests, studio air condi'revealed that; men. so suggests, studio air condi'revealed that she�*n. so suggests, studio air condi'revealed that she and) she's revealed that she and rachel riley, who's also on countdown, bring hot water bottles into the studio, blaming the air conditioning set to colder temperatures preferred by men. mean, you could men. i mean, yeah, you could just clothes . have you just wear clothes. have you heard these things called clothes? we put them over our skin to keep us warm. and that's why, you know, me and joshua, we're and jackets. we're in shirts and jackets. >> guys in >> well, you guys suffer in here, you? because it's here, don't you? because it's always in this studio. always too hot in this studio. and the opposite. and i said the opposite. >> sexism. and i said the opposite. >> yeah,exism. didn't say >> yeah, well, i didn't say that. hot in here, that. it's far too hot in here, so she should come and so maybe she should come and work for news. right. work for gb news. that's right. she should. work for gb news. that's right. sheshe'dd. work for gb news. that's right. sheshe'd love >> she'd love it. >> she'd love it. >> rachel, mate. >> rachel, mate. >> i'm not saying it's >> i mean, i'm not saying it's not great work. not a great place to work. bosses who are tuning in, i just mean her politics. know mean her politics. i don't know what politics are. what her politics are. >> riley is quite >> and rachel riley is quite based some things. based on some things. >> she's amazing. rachel >> no. she's amazing. rachel riley one heroes. riley is like one of my heroes. you amazing. you know, i think she's amazing. she against corbyn, she spoke up against corbyn, and she incredible amount of she gets an incredible amount of abuse. turns out she's abuse. and it turns out she's really hot. >> and you let her put the thermostat anywhere she liked , thermostat anywhere she liked, wouldn't you? josh, we hear this a don't we, a lot, though, don't we, that the world's men and the world's built for men and not we've just had not for ladies. we've just had international day again. international women's day again. >> where turned
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>> yeah, where we turned the thermostat up. >> when's it gonna be? >> when's it gonna be? >> when's it going to be international men's day? >> wonder what they still want >> i wonder what they still want when around. i think when it comes around. i think i'm i think i think we're i'm here. i think i think we're gonna have international women's day. we should have it. we should not being ceo should discuss not being a ceo and allowed to at and being allowed to stay at home if want, home with the kids if you want, and being alone. that would and being left alone. that would be suggestion . okay, i think be my suggestion. okay, i think we've that. feel we've covered that. you feel like vented? like you've vented? >> i've had rant. thank >> yes, i've had my rant. thank you the daily mail . you very much, the daily mail. now, we're asking, now, josh, we're still asking, does have a woman does oliver harbour have a woman problem, yes. liz truss. i hope everyone her. she was everyone remembers her. she was the, prime minister about four tory prime ministers ago , tory prime ministers ago, accuses labour of putting ideology above protecting children after mps filibuster to block her proposed law banning biological men from women only spaces. this was a good law that she was trying to implement. there is some confusion over the equality act of 2010, in that the exact definition of sex. and she wants to make it biological sex. so that protects women's spaces, women's sport that all seems eminently sensible. and
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labour have shot themselves in the foot, i believe, by causing this filibuster because it was a private member's bill, and if they ran out of time, then it would get booked to the bottom of the list, and there's no chance of it really coming back. now only positive is kemi now the only positive is kemi badenoch also looking into badenoch is also looking into something could something similar, which could be the government, something similar, which could be this the government, something similar, which could be this not the government, something similar, which could be this not a the government, something similar, which could be this not a good|overnment, something similar, which could be this not a good|overrforent, but this is not a good look for labour behaved this labour mps to have behaved this way. incredibly immature , way. it's incredibly immature, more because more so than anything, because let's the debate absolutely let's have the debate absolutely to just do it this. and to just do it like this. and just they were very immature just to they were very immature and talking like names and talking about like pet names and talking about like pet names and that has been the and whatnot that has been the problem all along. much of problem all along. so much of this could have been this toxicity could have been avoided places like stonewall avoided if places like stonewall didn't hashtag no didn't have these hashtag no debate. if you have an argument, if believe you a strong if you believe you have a strong good that's also the good argument, that's also the purpose make your purpose of channel. make your case. and don't just be all superior about it and think, oh no, don't even have to talk no, we don't even have to talk about yeah, yeah, yeah. about it. yeah, yeah, yeah. >> actually this this >> because actually this this could argued against, you could be argued against, you know, was suggesting know, liz truss was suggesting that we ban all biological males from spaces . but what from women's spaces. but what about the really hot trans who
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put the effort in and are totally convincing? they're totally convincing? and they're going going to be going to it's going to be weird if standing the if they're standing at the urinal. >> know, sometimes i think >> you know, sometimes i think about hot trans about those really hot trans women 20 years women and i think like 20 years ago, didn't didn't talk ago, we didn't we didn't talk about this, did we? it wasn't when it became movement when before it became a movement . i'm sort of being serious about this. i wouldn't have thought of if saw thought anything of it if i saw a trans woman the toilets. a trans woman in the toilets. and i hate this and perhaps i hate this phrase, but if she didn't if i if but if she didn't pass, if i if i thought i wouldn't any i thought i wouldn't feel any kind bad feeling towards that kind of bad feeling towards that person. some people person. i know some people disagree with this. they don't want males in want any biological males in women's spaces, but it's this kind thing got it to kind of thing that's got it to this level, isn't it? it's not being prepared to have the debate. being prepared debate. it's not being prepared to okay, well, this to talk about, okay, well, this could if could happen. i mean, even if you're you're you're a trans person and you're transition best thing, transition is the best thing, like that's ever happened like leos that's ever happened to her, wouldn't you still be concerned dark concerned to look into the dark corners could go corners of where it could go wrong other people ? wrong for other people? >> the trans debate has >> yeah, the trans debate has been these lumpy been hijacked by these lumpy fetish artists who have got, you know, not genuine trans know, they're not genuine trans people , you know, people people, you know, and people like like, like eddie izzard. it's like, come on, you're not that transvestite. >> where have transvestites
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gone? they're now called trans. you know, trans women. >> that's what they're i mean, obviously there's other people, lots of stakeholders in this debate, but my heart absolutely breaks for trans people who weren't causing any and weren't causing any trouble and weren't causing any trouble and were get on with were just trying to get on with their and now and now it's their life. and now and now it's in the headlines every day. yes. so anyway, it's to it's so anyway, it's going to be it's too now, it? the too short now, isn't it? the time the conservatives yeah. >> to actually do some governing. >> and so this is, is a kind >> and so all this is, is a kind of that they're throwing of beacon that they're throwing out this what let's out to say, this is what let's have a look at what you could have a look at what you could have won. it's well, exactly. >> done any >> if they'd actually done any governing last 13 governing over the last 13 years. all of this stuff years. i mean, all of this stuff obviously came through under a tory they tory government because they tried labour tried to outlay labour. labour now are finally figured now labour are finally figured out of the population now labour are finally figured out actually of the population now labour are finally figured out actually women population now labour are finally figured out actually women and ulation now labour are finally figured out actually women and going, are actually women and going, oh, actually shouldn't in oh, actually men shouldn't be in women's . but now you have women's sports. but now you have labour mps behaving this, labour mps behaving like this, maria , i believe, was one maria eagle, i believe, was one of the twin of of them. she's the twin of angela eagle. who? oh quizzed. only 100 grand from glad, only got 100 grand from glad, which is, what a coincidence there. >> what a coincidence. okay, the telegraph now . and scottish
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telegraph now. and scottish landowners are longing for a nanny state. they'd prefer that they want it to replace the devouring a or the devouring mother of a state that humza yousaf gets so excited about. leo. yeah. >> that's right. so explain that joke, please. >> no, i can't even write it . >> no, i can't even write it. >> humza yousaf plots ——— on landed gentry. so crackdown on landed gentry. so he spotted another successful part of scotland that hasn't yet been driven out and into penury. so he's putting through the land reform bill, which, would force those with more than 1000 hectares of land to sell in little chunks. instead of as a whole, to give, they say it'll make rural communities more sustainable by giving locals more of a chance to buy land. but for me, as somebody who used to work in the rural economy, i used to work as a grouse beater and do other things in the countryside, because my dad's a gunsmith grew up on the gunsmith and i grew up on the grouse moors, the, the countryside is already being it's already sustained and managed by people who know what
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they're doing. what we don't needis they're doing. what we don't need is a bunch of effete, urban intellectual communists to come intellectual communists to come in and destroy what is a functioning economy, which is what exactly what they're doing. i mean, this is this is basically a sort of lighter version of what they did in zimbabwe, where they come in and say, no, you can't own that. you can't, do this, you can't, you can't do this, you can't, you can't do this, you can't that. we've got all can't run that. we've got all these regulations then these new regulations and then these new regulations and then the apart and the economy falls apart and everybody starves. >> know, is incredible. >> i know, but it is incredible. there's 1000, essentially 1000 people much own 70% there's 1000, essentially 1000 pe scotland. much own 70% of scotland. >> oh, okay. here we go. so the leftie in you is saying let's divide it saying, no, no, i'm just i'm not saying it's right at all. >> i'm just % wnenln % wnen wen >> i'm just saying when you start the figures start looking at the figures about who actually owns this country, very country, it goes down to very limited number people. limited number of people. i don't this policy. don't agree with this policy. also, it's for show because 93% of sales were less of land sales anyway were less than so it's not than 500 hectares. so it's not even they're selling even like they're selling a thousand hectares once thousand hectares at once anyway. no, but 93% of anyway. it's just no, but 93% of sales by by volume, not by land mass. >> so the no, no the big sales can be very can be very large.
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they could be. they have to be. >> but there's no way they haven't even said what percentage. it's only a percent. 1% scotland is sold off 1% of scotland land is sold off annually so i really annually anyway, so i really don't many. don't know how many. >> apply to. >> the idea apply to. >> the idea apply to. >> yeah, but no, you don't buy a house every, every year. so i mean this does i mean this basically meddling . oh yeah. basically meddling. oh yeah. meddling in the rural economy. the done before . you the snp has done it before. you know, they they want to go in and they want stop grouse and they want to, stop grouse shooting. got these shooting. they've got these ideas grouse shooting, for ideas for grouse shooting, for example. as of, example. it's seen as a lot of, a lot of urbanites see it as this cruel thing where people pay this cruel thing where people pay money to blast birds out of the and, yeah, that's the sky. and, yeah, that's one way looking it. another way of looking at it. another way of looking at it. another way looking at it is do way of looking at it is where do you think food comes from? you think your food comes from? like think, know, like you think, you know, basically killed, basically when food is killed, it's got it's killed. yeah. you've got you've guy in a you've got some guy in a warehouse, some disinterested minimum hitting a calf minimum wage guy hitting a calf in a hit in the head with a plank, like, well, yeah, i mean, that's a great point, isn't it? >> shooting small things where you whites its you can see the whites of its eyes different. you can see the whites of its eyes grouse, different. you can see the whites of its eyes grouse, cgrouset. you can see the whites of its eyes grouse, (grouse leads and the grouse, the grouse leads a natural life, like, free from free from all these chemicals
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and free from being intensively reared and, you know, the environment has to be maintained. >> and doing that , doing that >> and doing that, doing that provides no doing that provides. well, bullet. it's well, it's not a bullet. it's shock because shoot shock because you can't shoot them with a rifle butt. them with a with a rifle butt. >> lots of bullets through the head. >> i've never eaten something that's shot it. it that's got shot in it. is it spitting bits out like pips is what a little bit sometimes. what i'm a little bit sometimes. >> not. it's not much of a >> it's not. it's not much of a not much of bother. good not much of a bother. it's good for but the environment is for you, but the environment is maintained the maintained and sustained so the grouse live there. so then grouse can live there. so then it an environment that it creates an environment that lots and lots of other, flora and fauna can and you don't can live there. and if you don't have grouse there, then it's have the grouse there, then it's used next most used for the next most profitable which often profitable use, which is often blanket forestry, profitable use, which is often blankeactually forestry, profitable use, which is often blankeactually toxifyingtry, profitable use, which is often blankeactually toxifying the which actually toxifying the soil complete monoculture , soil is a complete monoculture, destroys watercourses downstream because them. so because it acidifies them. so it's a disaster. and nobody, nobody in the snp would even know any of that. >> i'm amazed. i can't believe you're not best friends with chris packham. that is stunning. okay staying with the telegraph and yet story designed and yet another story designed to headliners panellists to worry headliners panellists josh mercedes rolls human josh mercedes rolls out human like for dull and
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like robots for dull and repetitive factory tasks. >> what's strange about this, and this is, like it, says mercedes. they've teamed up with a texas based company. is that these robots actually a human sized as well? so i don't know if they're going to kind of make them talk and be, oh, there we go. they'd be like, all right, well, did you see the sun? >> oh no. that looks like that bjork video. >> know all is do you >> you know all is love. do you remember that. yeah chris remember that. yeah. yeah chris skudder director. skudder him director. >> do kind of like >> they do kind of look like what sort imagine robots what you sort of imagine robots look like. look like instead of like. normally robots in a in normally we see robots in a in a car factory. they're just like an arm moving around. >> disappointing. >> disappointing. >> more >> so, i think we need more immigration. yeah, that's my take on this. more immigration, less robots , fewer robots, fewer less robots, fewer robots, fewer robots. immigration. robots. yes. more immigration. and yeah, they it's repetitive tasks to indefatigable machines. and i used to know what that word meant before covid, but george galloway knows. oh, really? well, he described describe saddam hussein as indefatigable. >> but i don't think saddam hussein would last long in a car factory, to be honest. but yeah,
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this is this is great. and this shows if you invest in shows that if you invest in tech, invest in in robots tech, if you invest in in robots to do the jobs, people don't want to do, then you don't need to have open borders and, you know, an unlimited supply of cheap labour over the border. >> humans or humans. yeah. lovely. the metro now, who knew russian polling stations were the best place for a children's birthday party? leo. >> so day one of russian elections is already leaving people baffled . and while the people baffled. and while the result is expected all over the metro says expected. oh, yes. up in the air a bit. you know, i mean, classic metro. i guess they're communists. so they they love it when vladimir putin wins, so vladimir putin, another termers president, some of the weird and wonderful happenings at polling stations have been taking centre stage. there have been up as all been people dressing up as all kinds of cartoon characters, a polar bear, i think an anteater. just anything spider—man as well, because this is everybody knows that this is just a ritual pubuc knows that this is just a ritual public display. it's an acclamation. it's something that goes back to the roman times.
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even the soviets these fake even the soviets held these fake elections to give the leader some sort of veneer of legitimacy, which he obviously doesn't have. and we've seen you know, any anybody who challenges putin politically, not just navalny who ended up being killed, but, igor girkin or strelkov as he's as he's known, he's he's in jail now and boris nadezhdin, he got he got enough signatures to stand and was, was denied, so yeah, it's an absolute sham. but in the west, we're not doing much better, so geert wilders was, was got by far the biggest proportion of the vote in the dutch election. so the people were obviously like, we like geert wilders, we voted for please make him voted for him. please make him prime he's the prime minister, he's the dictators really run things. dictators who really run things. have decided. no, you're not allowed to have its proportional representation . representation. >> got 33 out of 150 seats. >> he got by far the most his party >> he got by far the most his party by >> he got by far the most his party by far the most, with 33 out 100. out of 100. >> i mean, like, that's the point is that that's the system that there. that they've got there. >> plurality. >> there's a plurality. >> there's a plurality. >> the system they've got >> know the system they've got is any other party, if
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is like if any other party, if a centrist party or some sort of weird party had that weird lefty party had won that number of seats, they'd automatically minister. automatically be prime minister. but because the people but because, because the people who really run things have decided, you know, there's sort of schaefer's of to use louis schaefer's phrase, the one world government have wilders, have decided no. geert wilders, geert can't, be geert wilders can't, can't be allowed, people allowed, even though people voted for him. he's allowed. voted for him. he's not allowed. >> but it is, it >> but yeah, it's, but it is, it is interesting how the difference between elections, as leo , it's the way it's like leo says, it's the way it's like it's for show because it's meaningless . whereas when you meaningless. whereas when you come, when it comes to the uk, it never feels fun. everybody's very grim and they're the queue. >> it's like a sort of parents evening kind of vibe. it's not a lot of fun. >> am i gonna cross? >> am i gonna cross? >> crossed wrong thing, think. >> right. one section go, >> right. one section to go, we've art, pop up strip we've got bad art, pop up strip clubs and why today is the day karaoke died.
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welcome back to headliners starting with the telegraph. and news about some public art
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designed as a symbol of our shared present and future ambitions . what's your inner ambitions. what's your inner critic saying, leo? >> so, sadiq khan has approved plans to install a statue of a black everywoman on trafalgar square's fourth plinth as an apparent symbol of equality in the capital. oh, it's about time. it's about time, it's about time. there was some representation by sadiq khan of black women, so lady in blue, a painted bronze statue by new york artist of it here tschabalala self. that's genuinely her name . i'm not genuinely her name. i'm not being like, it's like robert crumb. >> do you know robert crumb? i a big fan of crumb. >> sexy, so it's been confirmed as the latest sculpture to be installed on the plinth, and the final remaining piece of, of your vision that won't be filled by, by diversity. but it's not the it's not the only diversity it's going to have. in september, the cast of 850 trans people, some of whom are sex workers, obviously are going to
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be up there and see them again, andifs be up there and see them again, and it's going to replace samson kambalu antelope, which depicts a chilembwe, a statue of john chilembwe, a black pastor who tried to lead an uprising in colonial nyasaland and who had a. >> you've been practising that for last three hours. >> oh my god, i'm just like, man, can we what cockneys? man, can we what about cockneys? can cockneys get any representation in london? >> actually enough. >> they're not actually enough. >> they're not actually enough. >> tiny little, >> there's only a tiny little, tiny red. tiny little red. >> just recognition that >> like just recognition that there some, like there were there were some, like , people in london, so cynical. >> leo. london's built on all that, so. so the art changes, doesn't it? that's what it's like, a graffiti wall. i'm from bristol. we have graffiti walls. you get to be on it for so long, and then somebody else comes along. yeah, and so i don't really the selection really understand the selection process here. they all sadiq khan. the first one >> it's just the first one eventually goes to sadiq to eventually goes to sadiq khan to approve and gets whittled approve it, and it gets whittled down from , you know, hundreds down from, you know, hundreds not to him to do his own art. no i quite that blues woman in i quite like that blues woman in blue. like the colour. yeah, blue. i like the colour. yeah, i think it looks quite nice, but
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someone had mentioned about being, late queen elizabeth. second, i think personally, i mean, i think let's have i think it's a good idea to have, like a rotating art space. i like that idea. i think it has worked for the last quarter century, but i think that the queen was pretty cool and she should have her own big old statue there. >> i think it's really weird that we're not having a statue for the mean, she she for the queen. i mean, she she was the queen that she's just for the queen. i mean, she she was the queen you she'sjust for the queen. i mean, she she was the queen you know,just called the queen. you know, i still i'm so sorry, still stumble. i'm so sorry, camilla. every time i hear the queen, the queen regent. queen, she's the queen regent. >> queen? we have >> the queen? we should have a statue of, the hamas chief statue of, of the hamas chief who's given a council house in sadiq khan's london. interesting >> well, let's submit that to sadiq okay, next it, sadiq khan. okay, next to it, i'm a woman. we don't like strip clubs, especially ones called p0p clubs, especially ones called pop that's a bit pop up. that's a bit unfortunate, it? unfortunate, isn't it? >> is it? >> is it? >> josh, was this in the guardian up strip clubs? >> very nice, women at cheltenham threatened by cheltenham feel threatened by p0p up cheltenham feel threatened by pop up strip clubs. say, minister. obviously you've minister. so obviously you've got festival got the cheltenham festival council, going on at the council, but going on at the moment, and they have. yeah. i
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didn't know this, i didn't know that. >> and i'm from round there supposedly, and i had no idea. >> and supposedly when it's going on they go, they put up a strip club for all those blokes who rock up and want to see some naked during the naked women during the cheltenham festival. >> idea. >> i had no idea. >> i had no idea. >> but they're that women >> but they're saying that women feel in the town feel threatened in the town centre. would what they've not centre. i would what they've not doneis centre. i would what they've not done is do a correlation between that. done is do a correlation between that . it's because of the strip that. it's because of the strip clubs or it's just because there's a lot more men around, a lot more alcohol flowing. i don't there's nothing to here say that because of the say that it's because of the strip that's women strip clubs. that's why women are feeling. strip clubs. that's why women are feeisig. strip clubs. that's why women are feeis it. strip clubs. that's why women are feeis it just because women >> or is it just because women have and like to have feelings and they like to feel so when they feel things. and so when they see men, they see these men, they feel threatened . imagine if imagine threatened. imagine if imagine if look, i, if somebody said, oh, look, i, i've feel threatened out i've seen i feel threatened out other people. that's, well other people. oh that's, well that's whatever that's racist or that's whatever ist that's transphobic. that's racist or that's whatever ist that'butansphobic. that's racist or that's whatever ist that'butanthinknic. have a, >> no. but i think women have a, have reasonable, no , to feel have reasonable, no, to feel that way. >> i don't believe it. >> i don't believe it. >> yeah i agree alcohol makes a boisterous environment. i mean, i don't like that, but i would
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just say don't like strip just say don't like the strip clubs. no. why would you want that? quite posh. clubs. no. why would you want tha but quite posh. clubs. no. why would you want tha but also, quite posh. clubs. no. why would you want tha but also, we're quite posh. clubs. no. why would you want tha but also, we're goingiosh. clubs. no. why would you want tha but also, we're going to h. >> but also, if we're going to talk rights and talk about women's rights and stuff i like stuff like that. i like supporting, single mothers through of through a series of microtransactions at these. >> oh, hello, it's the daily mail now claims that red nose day was a bigger deal when two straight white men uncle straight white men doing uncle at dancing were at a wedding dancing were promoting can't be promoting it. that can't be right, leo? so nostalgic right, can it, leo? so nostalgic brits claim that red nose day used bigger deal, noting brits claim that red nose day usedlittle bigger deal, noting brits claim that red nose day usedlittle buildjger deal, noting brits claim that red nose day usedlittle build upr deal, noting brits claim that red nose day usedlittle build up there, noting brits claim that red nose day usedlittle build up there has:ing how little build up there has been as epic 1990s been this year as epic 1990s comic relief resurfaces online. >> mean, who gets nostalgic >> i mean, who gets nostalgic for red nose days david for red nose days is david brent? this is ridiculous. but yeah, these people on the internet or whatever have been i mean, this isn't an article. this is just stuff off the internet. so somebody's saying like, the day, it like, oh, back in the day, it was a big deal. there was was such a big deal. there was more stuff. there's more stuff to in the world now. people to do in the world now. people don't time care about don't have time to care about world anymore, nor the world poverty anymore, nor the attention red nose day. attention span for red nose day. oh famous that that oh yeah, that famous that that famously difficult and arduous. it finishing ulysses as it was like finishing ulysses as it was, but it does feel like it was part of the cultural fabric
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at the time. >> it was a huge deal. it was. i remember that first year everybody desperately trying everybody was desperately trying to noses and to get these red noses and they were they'd sold everywhere. were they'd sold out everywhere. in there were in the ensuing years, there were genuinely sketches through in the ensuing years, there were genltime. sketches through in the ensuing years, there were genltime. and sketches through in the ensuing years, there were genltime. and would es through in the ensuing years, there were genltime. and would say1rough in the ensuing years, there were genltime. and would say that|h that time. and i would say that the reason why this is somewhat important, even know important, i didn't even know today nose day . oh it's today was red nose day. oh it's today. yeah, yeah, today. no. yeah, exactly. yeah, it because i would say it's it is, because i would say it's indicative of what comedy has turned into that look , there's turned into that look, there's good someone here from, good things. someone here from, mollie king who's some singer saturday. she's raised £1 million. that's great stuff, raising good money. but in terms of there used to be sort of water cooler moments and it feels like danger has gone out of it. any risk has gone out of it. and it's and also we've, we've got, we've got to raise in this story about karaoke in the metro. got this josh . >> who's got this josh. >> who's got this josh. >> yes. man invented karaoke has badly sung his final song and died 100. oh, it's very sad, but he actually died in january 29th and his daughter kept it secret from us. >> she kept his death. wow.
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that's. that's darker than i would expect for the king of karaoke, okay. this show is nearly fly me to the moon. so let's take another quick look at saturday's front pages. the daily mail plot to crown morden as pm telegraph has mercer faces jail over afghan inquiry. the times has church playing race card i news has deliveroo and uber eats backdoor to illegal migration. express has hunts olive branch to fearful pensioners and finally , the pensioners and finally, the daily star mystery of the rampant beavers and those were your front pages. that's all we have time for. thank you for my guests, josh and leo. i'll be back tomorrow with louis and nick, if you're watching at 5 am, stay tuned for breakfast. a.m, stay tuned for breakfast. good night . good night. >> that warm feeling inside from boxt boilers, sponsors of weather on gb news. >> hello. very good evening to
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you . welcome to your latest gb you. welcome to your latest gb news weather update brought to you by the met office . for many you by the met office. for many of us, it's actually going to turn quite chilly tonight. could be of frost before some be a touch of frost before some rain tomorrow. rain arrives tomorrow. that's in association with a system waiting atlantic. waiting out in the atlantic. before though, do have before that, though, we do have a ridge high pressure a ridge of high pressure building that's going to building and that's going to quieten weather down we quieten our weather down as we go the of the day. go through the end of the day. so of the daytime showers so many of the daytime showers will clear away die out, will clear away and die out, leaving mostly dry and often leaving a mostly dry and often clear night. as result, clear night. as a result, because of clear skies and because of the clear skies and a bit of a northerly wind, temperatures will take bit of temperatures will take a bit of a drop. going a drop. it's going to be markedly than recent markedly colder than some recent nights. frost is nights. touch of frost is possible, particularly in rural spots, across parts spots, especially across parts of scotland. as we go through tomorrow then watch out of scotland. as we go through tona rrow then watch out of scotland. as we go through tona few then watch out of scotland. as we go through tona few pocketshen 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 northern eastern across northern and eastern parts, but towards the south and west here we are going to see clouds its way in, but clouds spilling its way in, but this won't really northern this won't really reach northern and until later in and eastern parts until later in the some wet weather the afternoon. some wet weather around heavy times, around could be heavy at times, particularly northern particularly across northern ireland, a chilly
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ireland, but after a chilly start, so start, temperatures rising so most places likely to get into 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 actually looks thereafter sunday actually looks largely of 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 see some sunny of us will see some sunny breaks. monday doesn't look too wet, is on the wet, but further rain is on the cards for tuesday. i'll see you again soon. bye. again soon. bye bye. >> a brighter outlook with boxt solar of weather on
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he's reportedly hold secret talks to oust sunak. >> two former tory donors could pocket more than £6 million from home office contracts relating to the government's plans for rwanda. >> drivers are told to stay at home following the unprecedented closure of the m25, sparking fears of gridlock and the nhs plans to introduce electric ambulances are calling into question whether it's placing greater importance on net zero than patient safety . also this than patient safety. also this morning, meghan markle under fire after using her royal title for the launch of her new lifestyle brand and chelsea women's football manager emma hayesis women's football manager emma hayes is in hot water too. >> after warning players about inappropriate relationships within football squads. so we are asking should companies actually workplace romance? actually ban workplace romance? >> good morning. the champions league draw threw up major
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