Skip to main content

tv   Saturday Morning Live  GB News  March 16, 2024 10:00am-12:01pm GMT

10:00 am
vote uk, alex of the youth vote uk, alex cairns, and entrepreneur and social commentator joanna jarjue. >> and we'll be looking into that photo shop. fail from the princess of wales, okay, she admitted she liked experimenting with photo editing. so it's all the media attention warranted. >> yeah. do let us know what you think. tomorrow of course, is saint patrick's day. so we thought, why not see what we can get up to at home? home baking goods. you can make. to celebrate, we're going to be joined by the author baker joined by the author and baker extraordinaire, mel to extraordinaire, mel johnson to find exciting . find out more exciting. >> and of course, we'll be meeting this week's greatest britain i love this part of the show, the inspiring woman being the charity scottish little soldiers, which offers support for whose parents have for children whose parents have died while serving in the armed forces. going to . forces. it's going to. be great. >> and we've got a real treat for you this morning . do you for you this morning. do you remember these boys in love?
10:01 am
don't put your hands up, everybody in love. >> go! put your hands up. everybody in love. go! put your hands up. if you're in love, put your hands up. put your hands up. yes >> we're going to be sitting down with a boy band legend . the down with a boy band legend. the one and only richie williams from jls . we are so excited to from jls. we are so excited to hear what he's getting up to. his good friend of yours, isn't he? >> he's a good friend and he's doing a great solo career. he is? pump him up. >> yeah, he says this new solo career is going to bring him back to his roots. we're really looking that . looking forward to that. >> am too. and don't >> yeah, i am too. and don't forget want hear from forget that we want to hear from you.so forget that we want to hear from you. so please email us at gbviews@gbnews.uk . gbviews@gbnews.uk. >> but before we do anything >> com but before we do anything else, has else, tatiana sanchez has all your headlines. your news headlines. >> lee peter, thank you very much. your top stories from the gb newsroom. tory mps have reported held secret talks to
10:02 am
oust the prime minister and install penny mordaunt as leader of the conservatives according to the telegraph, a group of right wing conservative mps believe miss morden should lead the tories into the next election. a meeting is understood to have taken place between leading figures on the tory mps and mp supporters of the commons leader. well, this comes after a week in which former tory deputy chairman lee anderson joined the reform uk party and rishi sunak ruled out a general election in early may. senior political analyst at orthodox conservatives david moore told gb news the change might be what's needed to boost pubuc might be what's needed to boost public confidence . public confidence. >> conservative party have had so many leaders. i think people are frustrated, the membership is frustrated, the voters are frustrated, in fact apathetic. a lot of voters are very worried about getting out to vote at the moment, and we need some certainty. quite frankly, and we need strong conservative leadership. people leadership. now, some people think and see penny mordaunt as a vehicle for that. with a strong background in defence at
10:03 am
the moment, a lot of people are very unhappy at the moment and the membership especially, but at the moment the general election is looming, this could be may, this could be in be in may, this could be in october, but conservatives october, but the conservatives need to that need to come in to that election. united >> wales will know who their next first minister is today. that's due to be announced in the next few minutes. voting closed on thursday. the successful candidate will succeed mark drakeford. fawn gething and jeremy miles have been competing to replace mr drakeford , who officially stands drakeford, who officially stands down next week . sadiq khan has down next week. sadiq khan has issued a plea for liberal democrat and green supporters to back him , as he seeks a third back him, as he seeks a third terms as the mayor of london in a pitch to fellow progressives. mr khan's launching what he describes as a love letter campaign as he visits kingston in southwest london today to persuade supporters of other parties to lend him their votes in the election. the mayor said
10:04 am
he was under no illusion about his chances, saying he could lose to the conservatives susan hall due to changes in the voting system . thousands of voting system. thousands of shoppers won't get their online groceries delivered today. sainsbury's have announced that they can't fulfil most of their onune they can't fulfil most of their online orders because they're experiencing a technical difficulty. the company also says that some stores are also going to be affected , and they going to be affected, and they say they're working hard to fix the issue . well, traffic has the issue. well, traffic has already been building up, with the first ever planned daytime closure of the m25. drivers have been warned to stay away from a five mile stretch in surrey between junctions ten and ii, which has been shut until 6 am. on monday. this is the first scheduled daytime all lane shutdown on the m25 since it openedin shutdown on the m25 since it opened in 1986. travel expert simon calder says it needs to be done. >> the main problem is that a three, m25 junction just a
10:05 am
couple of miles away from here, when it was built in the 1980s, it was fine , but now there's so it was fine, but now there's so much traffic using it, and 80% of the traffic on the a3 wants to switch to the m25. you're always getting hold ups there. very high accident rate. there and so therefore to clear it all up they're going to widen things. give people extra opportunities to join and leave the motorways . the motorways. >> and a manhunt is still underway after two people were injured in a suspected crossbow attacks in london last night. the metropolitan police says a man and a woman were shot with crossbow bolts in separate but unked crossbow bolts in separate but linked to attacks . the 44 year linked to attacks. the 44 year old woman was struck in the head, and a 20 year old man in the neck within 200ft of one another. both victims were treated for their injuries in hospital, but they've been discharged . officers are discharged. officers are carrying out urgent work to identify a suspect . for the identify a suspect. for the latest stories, you can sign up
10:06 am
to gb news alerts by scanning the qr code on your screen. or you can go to gb news. com slash alerts. now it's back to ellie and pete . and pete. >> thanks, tatiana, and welcome to saturday morning live. the time is 10:06. now decorate your bathroom or something. that is the advice given to thousands of drivers following the unprecedented closure of the m25 , with many anticipating gridlock. traffic over the weekend . weekend. >> yes, drivers are being warned to stay away from a five mile stretch in surrey between junctions ten and 11, which is now shut until 6 am. on monday. well, it's the first scheduled daytime. >> all lanes shut down on the m25 since it first opened in 1986. >> well, gb news reporter ray addison is there. so what's going on, ray ? how you doing? going on, ray? how you doing? good morning to you both. >> well, i'm alongside the a i'm
10:07 am
good.thank >> well, i'm alongside the a i'm good. thank you. i'm alongside the a320 which is going through the a320 which is going through the very leafy village of ottershaw in surrey. now ottershaw in surrey. now ottershaw actually features in the h.g. wells science fiction classic war of the worlds. of course, about that famous invasion. and locals here tell me they feel like they're being invaded by traffic. this is normally quite a quiet location population here in this village is actually under 3000 people. but today , tomorrow, up to 6:00 but today, tomorrow, up to 6:00 on monday morning, they're being warned by national highways that they could face up to 6000 vehicles travelling through here every hour. now, why is that a problem? well, here, if you just pan around here, we can see this is actually the home to quite a major ambulance station. and i've been speaking to locals and they've been telling me that they're seriously concerned that if they do up with gridlock if they do end up with gridlock traffic, they could face traffic, that they could face problems. these ambulances, paramedics could face problems in responding to any emergencies
10:08 am
down the end of this road. down here we have a big roundabout which could potentially become blocked. they fear and therefore they're encouraging people to heed that advice to take alternate routes, stay at home. they say , but do not travel they say, but do not travel through our village. okay >> ray addison, thank you very much indeed. that is a bit of a worry, but for now at least, there's not gridlock traffic behind you, do you? let us know if you today. if that affects you today. gb views news. com but for views at gb news. com but for now to look through the top stories of today. are stories of today. we are delighted joined by ceo delighted to be joined by ceo and of the youth vote and founder of the youth vote uk, cairns , and uk, alex cairns, and entrepreneur social entrepreneur and social commentator joanna jarjue. really good to see you both this morning and we wanted to start with this story, the front page of the daily mail this morning. pretty extraordinary, isn't it? a penny mordaunt a plot to crown penny mordaunt as the next leader of the tory party? the fourth, this would be since the 2019 elections. it's extraordinary. joanna. yeah >> i mean, to be honest, it's not really a surprise. it seems as if every two seconds there's
10:09 am
kind of a for a takedown of kind of a plot for a takedown of a prime minister even, you know, one of most popular ones, one of the most popular ones, bofis had one of the most popular ones, boris had a plot by boris johnson, had a plot by rishi it seems as rishi sunak, and it seems as if it's of coming full it's kind of all coming full circle now. and some would say that it's karma, really, for rishi sunak and imagine that rishi sunak and i'd imagine that a people who were a lot of the people who were actually supporting penny mordaunt for mordaunt or looking for a takedown rishi sunak are also takedown of rishi sunak are also massive supporters of boris johnson and kind of come from that camp. but then the same that camp. but then at the same time look at penny mordaunt that camp. but then at the same time you ok at penny mordaunt that camp. but then at the same time you know, ’enny mordaunt that camp. but then at the same time you know, as ny mordaunt that camp. but then at the same time you know, as somebodynt that camp. but then at the same time you know, as somebody who's and, you know, as somebody who's not supporter and i kind not a tory supporter and i kind of think that she seems like more of the decent side of the tory party, quite level headed. obviously you know, she's fulfilled certain roles. we all saw her in the coronation you know, holding the thing and, you know, holding the thing and, you know, know, all of know, out of, you know, all of them. it seems as if she's the most kind of decent really. so it's to me that it's quite surprising to me that people at right side people who are at the right side of the party and the moderates are in to bring her in, are coming in to bring her in, because it seems as if, you know, they're trying oust know, they're trying to oust rishi because he's not rishi sunak because he's not extreme enough for them it extreme enough for them when it comes tackling
10:10 am
comes to, you know, tackling migration about rwanda. and migration and about rwanda. and i the people i just wonder if the people who are right of are at the right side of the party will actually what party will actually get what they penny mordaunt, they want from penny mordaunt, but you've made a really but i think you've made a really good there, is that good point there, which is that she that broad appeal, she does have that broad appeal, doesn't she, across the party. she does have that broad appeal, doeand she, across the party. she does have that broad appeal, doeand that's:ross the party. she does have that broad appeal, doeand that's whatthe party. she does have that broad appeal, doeand that's what the party. she does have that broad appeal, doeand that's what the tory. >> and that's what the tory party isn't it, alex? >> yeah. but i actually think that sitting at that they've been sitting at home watching cards home watching house of cards because fact that they're because the fact that they're about another prime about to ditch another prime minister actually minister is actually mentor. i was backstage to joanna, minister is actually mentor. i vireckon backstage to joanna, minister is actually mentor. i vireckon there'szstage to joanna, minister is actually mentor. i vireckon there's going to joanna, minister is actually mentor. i vireckon there's going to be nna, i reckon there's going to be a netflix documentary after the election. it's going to be all of reality of this plotting and the reality is matter who is like, it doesn't matter who they in as leader, right? they put in as leader, right? like the proof is in the pudding, like they're trying to get migration figures down. they're people get migration figures down. the ine people get migration figures down. the ine housing people get migration figures down. theine housing ladder.3le get in the housing ladder. they're to get interest they're trying to get interest rates of is rates down. none of that is happening. doesn't really happening. so it doesn't really matter who's prime minister, right? whoever right? they could put whoever and make difference. and it won't make a difference. >> think it will? >> so do you not think it will? >> so do you not think it will? >> think it's too late. >> no. i think it's too late. they're behind in the polls. they're behind in the polls. they're this because they they're doing this because they want regroup the want to regroup. regroup the narrative, it, but it's narrative, i get it, but it's not to make difference. not going to make a difference. who's what if they get >> but what if what if they get that right, but then they that bit right, but then they get something else wrong? i mean, is to get
10:11 am
mean, who is going to get everything right? there everything right? has there ever been got been someone that's got everything this everything right? and this is the you know, the problem. so, you know, they might solve problem, but might solve one problem, but then problem. then there's another problem. >> seems as if the >> so it just seems as if the tory party overall have become more than ever more divided than we've ever kind of witnessed. i think kind of witnessed. and i think that tory party themselves that the tory party themselves and the mps don't have enough confidence in themselves. i mean, are mean, over 60 of them are stepping down for the next general election. some of general election. and some of them, people like them, you know, people like theresa and theresa may, real veterans. and then got some then obviously you've got some people some of the people that maybe some of the nafion people that maybe some of the nation might quite nation might actually be quite glad the back of, like glad to see the back of, like matt and kwasi kwarteng, matt hancock and kwasi kwarteng, that best that we haven't had the best experiences with. and i think experiences with. and so i think that party almost needs that the tory party almost needs to some time, take to take some time, maybe take a step back and regroup and actually out, you know, actually figure out, you know, what actual principles are what their actual principles are so know they even so that we know who they even are they're so divided are because they're so divided at the moment. >> do what it is about >> do you know what it is about penny think it might penny mordaunt? i think it might have coronation the have been the coronation and the sword, strikes me as sword, as she just strikes me as the that you the prime minister that you would an itv drama. would see on an itv drama. >> do you not think she looks prime ministerial? >> have been like cobra >> have you been like cobra wouldn't on sky? 100. wouldn't she on sky? yeah, 100. yeah yeah yeah. yeah yeah yeah yeah. >> i wonder if that >> so i mean i wonder if that carries over to the tory party
10:12 am
what do you think at home, do you if rishi were to you think if rishi sunak were to be penny mordaunt be replaced, is penny mordaunt the to go? do us know the way to go? do let us know what you gb views at gb what you think. gb views at gb news. com. >> emma emm- >> yeah. and i'd like to talk about middleton, because >> yeah. and i'd like to talk abo really middleton, because >> yeah. and i'd like to talk abo really confused on, because >> yeah. and i'd like to talk abo really confused here. cause i'm really confused here. everyone where is she? what is she why did she photoshop she doing? why did she photoshop this? what? that. she doing? why did she photoshop this?can't what? that. she doing? why did she photoshop this?can't we what? that. she doing? why did she photoshop this?can't we just what? that. she doing? why did she photoshop this?can't we just leave that. she doing? why did she photoshop this?can't we just leave hert. why can't we just leave her alone ? what is going on here? alone? what is going on here? what's your. what's your thoughts on this? i think it's tough, because naturally, you know, looking this know, if i was looking at this and didn't all and we didn't have all the context everything context of everything that's gone royal family gone on in the royal family previously , we. previously, we. >> be saying leave her >> i would be saying leave her alone. but same time, alone. but at the same time, i think that the royal family have made by setting made a huge mistake by setting a certain when comes made a huge mistake by setting a ce meghan. when comes made a huge mistake by setting a ce meghan. and when comes made a huge mistake by setting a ce meghan. and i when comes made a huge mistake by setting a ce meghan. and i think comes made a huge mistake by setting a ce meghan. and i think that mes made a huge mistake by setting a ce meghan. and i think that when to meghan. and i think that when you've branded meghan as you've kind of branded meghan as the that's demanding the one that's demanding privacy, really privacy, but then not really realising that she's got a particular role and a duty and has to kind of be paraded in front us no matter what, then front of us no matter what, then you up a position now you end up in a position now when needs the when kate really needs the privacy can't get it privacy and she can't get it because so used being because we're so used to being in their business and finding out everything about them, even after given birth , you
10:13 am
after they've given birth, you know, set that precedent know, they've set that precedent with the women. >> what if it's a mental >> what if what if it's a mental health issue? what it's health issue? what if it's something like that? or a long, ongoing physical, thing that she doesn't want to talk about and she's never talked about? you know, we are we not just pushing someone who be in someone who might be in a vulnerable position, pushing them know, to the end of them to you know, to the end of their tether? >> yeah, but you know what it is. it's because everyone sees the royal family as, like, ambassadors. so they're thinking, at home. thinking, well, she's at home. and people controversially and some people controversially will to will be like, well, we need to see her. she's like the face of multiple they're multiple charities. they're basically unfortunately, with the they're not the royal family, if they're not seen, like, seen, people are like, well, what's the of and what's the point of them? and i know sounds harsh, but you know that sounds harsh, but you know, is some person know, this is not some person that work from home that she can't work from home like to front of, like she has to be in front of, like she has to be in front of, like the media. she has to be representing charities. and she might struggling. but might be struggling. but unfortunately, think might be struggling. but unfort the :ely, think might be struggling. but unfort the royal think might be struggling. but unfort the royal family,�*|k might be struggling. but unfort the royal family, to be about the royal family, to be honest, them are quite, honest, a lot of them are quite, you know, people don't like them, lot people them, but k a lot of people like her. family her. so the royal family brown are thinking, need are thinking, well, we need a like william are like like her and william are like the future. >> well she's been described as
10:14 am
the goose 100. i mean, the golden goose 100. i mean, yeah, they on a lot, yeah, they rely on her a lot, don't i mean, front don't they? i mean, she's front page whenever page of the newspapers whenever she it's been she steps out. yeah. it's been amazing photos amazing actually seeing photos of morning. how much of her this morning. how much we all her. know, we all miss her. you know, we haven't seen her since just after does have an after christmas. it does have an impact on the royal family not having centre. having kate front and centre. >> she's alone. yeah, >> just wish she's alone. yeah, because think it's really because you think it's really unfair, she's just, because you think it's really unfe know, she's just, because you think it's really unfeknow, she's she's just, because you think it's really unfeknow, she's so'>he's just, because you think it's really unfeknow, she's so loved jst, because you think it's really unfeknow, she's so loved and you know, she's so loved and clearly there's something going on want people on that she doesn't want people to know about. >> so just. >> so can we just. >> what do you think about with that saga that that whole photoshop saga that happened? call happened? i'm not going to call it because i think it a scandal, because i think actually been of actually there's been a lot of sympathy for her, what do you think about her being the one to apologise do think apologise for that? do you think that apologise for that? do you think tha well, get the >> well, then you get the conspiracy theorists who say it wasn't was apologising. wasn't her that was apologising. it someone mean, we it was someone else. i mean, we don't all these sorts don't know with all these sorts of things, you get. you of things, you only get. you only you you only know what you see. you don't actual truth of don't know the actual truth of what's i just i don't what's going on. i just i don't know something about her. she's really her. really special to her. >> she is. just wish people >> she is. i just wish people would give her a break. let would just give her a break. let her she's ready . her talk when she's ready. >> that they would >> i wish that they would actually her a more. actually protect her a bit more. i because i realise. yeah, because it seems their pr is
10:15 am
seems as if. yeah, their pr is just being terrible really, when it comes to protecting the princess wales and having her princess of wales and having her take the rap for it, even if she did it. i think that was did do it. i think that was quite unfair really, and they should had , you know, a bit should have had, you know, a bit of a better strategy to and i think it would have been a better strategy give us a bit better strategy to give us a bit because let's forget that because let's not forget that the actually divulged the king has actually divulged a lot comes to his health lot when it comes to his health issues. so would have been issues. so it would have been good just to get a bit and then actually kind of play off that sympathy. if you to good sympathy. if you want to be good and kind of strategic. >> have it both ways >> but can you have it both ways , suppose, joanna, because the , i suppose, joanna, because the king, being so king, as you say, is being so open honest about his open and honest about his diagnosis. then we have diagnosis. but then we have catherine, wales, diagnosis. but then we have cath being wales, diagnosis. but then we have cath being quite wales, diagnosis. but then we have cath being quite traditionals, still being quite traditional and wanting complete privacy. still being quite traditional and wan have omplete privacy. still being quite traditional and wan have itnplete privacy. still being quite traditional and wan have it bothe privacy. still being quite traditional and wan have it both ways? cy. can you have it both ways? i promise we'll come back this promise we'll come back to this in moment. but just some in just a moment. but just some breaking i to breaking news. i want to get your reaction the economy your reaction to the economy minister. gething has minister. vaughan gething has been next welsh been elected as the next welsh labour going to labour leader. he's going to succeed drakeford as the succeed mark drakeford as the first minister of wales, he will succeed mark drakeford, who has held the position since 2018. i
10:16 am
mean, vaughan gethin in wales is a huge name, isn't he, alex? >> yeah he is. >> yeah he is. >> i mean, he was the health minister during covid. a lot of people trust him. you know he's quite, you know on the ground. a lot of people him. lot of people like him. so i think good. think that'll be good. but interestingly in interestingly i think in the next i think that next election i still think that in wales, unlike the rest of the country, were really country, people were really unhappy mile an unhappy about the 20 mile an hour some people hour situation. some people think that were too harsh think that wales were too harsh and again, i, you and lockdown. so again, i, you know, i like him but i think he is still a bit of a marmite figure though to be honest. >> okay. >> okay. >> all right. well really good to get response to that. to get your response to that. breaking that vaughan breaking news that vaughan gethin the next first gethin is the next first minister of wales that has been announced, this announced, in cardiff this morning. cardiff morning. are we going to cardiff 7 morning. are we going to cardiff ? yes we are. this isn't live but these are pictures from a little bit earlier on this morning. well thank you, boris and
10:17 am
carolyn and joe for the introduction to the event. >> and thank you to the welsh labour staff and the team and the procedures committee who have run a typically well organised campaign . the first organised campaign. the first thing to do is to pay tribute to mark. much has already been said about mark as a details man, but he was the right leader at the right time in the pandemic and it is true that we will be forever in his debt to his forensic approach to public policy through that time. but too little is said about the heart that went into it, to the deep and unwavered devotion to fairness to wales as a community, as a people , as community, as a people, as a fabnc community, as a people, as a fabric of family. community, as a people, as a fabric of family . at the hardest fabric of family. at the hardest of times, he made us feel safer.
10:18 am
he made us feel proud, and he always made everyone aware that we each have a part to play. >> a victory speech there from vaughan gethin, who is going to succeed mark drakeford as wales and he looks good and he does. >> what's with everyone looking like actors and actresses at the moment? >> so we have our own barack obama moment. >> i mean, he has he has just made history . made history. >> he is the first black first minister of wales. yeah, i mean, it's significant. >> he's made it look good. >> he's made it look good. >> yeah he does. what do you make it joanna i think it's great. >> you know, i think that the labour particular and labour party in particular and as i don't think as a member, i don't think they've that much diversity they've had that much diversity when their when it comes to their leadership. actually leadership. and actually particularly it particularly i've noticed it more comes to women more when it comes to women leaders, it's to kind of leaders, so it's good to kind of get that, you know, at least some diversity comes to, some diversity when it comes to, race this. i'd be race within this. i'd be interested see what he does . interested to see what he does. i think that it will be quite difficult like alex difficult for him. like alex said, in, in wales. and just because as if whenever because i feel as if whenever there's kind of a branding, especially last 14 especially over the last 14 years about what labour can
10:19 am
possibly do, people say, well, look at wales, know, they're look at wales, you know, they're failing y and z. that's failing in x, y and z. that's kind the thing that the kind of the thing that the tories always but hopefully tories always use. but hopefully going next election, he going into the next election, he can that out and can kind of keep that out and get bit more support as well. get a bit more support as well. from westminster and be able to do a more as well for the do a lot more as well for the labour party. >> what do you think? >> alex, what do you think? >> alex, what do you think? >> agree actually. >> yeah, i agree actually. i think lot people will be think a lot of people will be like, you know, the change candidate sure he'll candidate, i'm sure he'll come in. know, think mark in. you know, i think mark drakeford, mean he doesn't drakeford, i mean he doesn't look like him. right. mark drakeford was boring like drakeford was quite boring like he was a bit mundane like. >> and yeah, i know quite >> and yeah, i know that's quite harsh say , but i think, you harsh to say, but i think, you know, it'll be interesting to see gets on. see how it gets on. yeah. >> well if you're watching >> yeah. well if you're watching and in wales, do and listening to us in wales, do let know what you think. let us know what you think. vaiews@gbnews.com. alex. joanna, very joanna, thank you very much indeed. you're with us in the next you very much. next hour. thank you very much. >> guys. right. coming >> thank you guys. right. coming up, be down with up, we'll be sitting down with this greatest briton. you this week's greatest briton. you know part of know it's my favourite part of the show. but up next it's time for world news for the latest in world news with favourite royal with our favourite royal correspondent very dear with our favourite royal corres|of|dent very dear with our favourite royal corres|of mine, very dear with our favourite royal corres|of mine, v bond. ar friend of mine, jennie bond. this morning on
10:20 am
this is saturday morning live on gb britain's channel
10:21 am
10:22 am
10:23 am
>> good morning. welcome back to saturday morning live and spring is in the air. finally >> na na na na na na. >> and social chants to win a garden gadget package. which is a bit of a mouthful there. a shopping spree and an incredible £12,345 in tax free cash. here's how you can make all those pnzes how you can make all those prizes yours. >> we've got cash , treats and >> we've got cash, treats and a spnng >> we've got cash, treats and a spring shopping spree to be won in a great british giveaway. you could win an amazing £12,345 in tax free cash . plus there's tax free cash. plus there's a further £500 of shopping vouchers to spend at your favourite store. we'll also give you a gadget package to use in your garden. this spring. that includes a games console, a pizza and portable smart pizza oven and a portable smart speaker so you can listen to gb news go for another
10:24 am
news on the go for another chance to win the vouchers. the treats and £12,345 in tax free cash. treats and £12,345 in tax free cash . text gb win to 84 9002 cash. text gb win to 84 9002 texts cost £2 plus one standard network rate message or post your name and number two gb gbo3, p0 your name and number two gb gb03, po box 8690. derby de19 double tee, uk only entrants must be 18 or over. lines close at 5 pm. on friday the 29th march. full terms and privacy nofice march. full terms and privacy notice at gbnews.com. forward slash win please check the closing time if watching or listening on demand. good luck. >> yes, good luck indeed . now >> yes, good luck indeed. now it's been a big week for the royal household from meghan markle relaunching her instagram brand, the princess of wales trying her hand at photoshop and prince harry and prince william separately praising diana's legacy for the charity's 25th anniversary. it's been a busy week. >> it sure has. so who better to unpick all the latest than the royal commentator and friend of mine, jennie bond? how are you?
10:25 am
lovely. >> very well, thank you pete . >> very well, thank you pete. yeah, you're looking good, both of you. >> yeah. thank you very much. and you too. so. okay, the feuding brothers, let's talk about this. harry and william, are ever to make up? are they ever going to make up? i mean, it just seems to be one minute. they seem like they're going to get it back together. then the next minute they're completely separated again. what's thoughts? completely separated again. wh well, thoughts? completely separated again. wh well, thinkrghts? completely separated again. wh well, think this.? completely separated again. wh well, think this is the >> well, i think this is the clearest illustration that this relationship absolutely relationship is going absolutely nowhere , i mean, they couldn't nowhere, i mean, they couldn't even appear virtually at the same event, the diana legacy awards. and that means a great deal to them. they're both very supportive of that, that awards, whatever it is, organisation , whatever it is, organisation, and they've decided i think it was probably william decided that he couldn't even appear in the same room with harry on a screen from california. so william spoke first, and then harry appeared virtually. what a sad situation and how desperate their mum would have been, i personally think that she would
10:26 am
have found a way some time ago to sort this out, and maybe the rift would never have happened, but i'm sure she would have knock their heads together and said, come on, boys, you've got to sort this out . to sort this out. >> it also seems when our queen was here, things seemed a lot more sort of together. seems to be so much separation going on. >> well, they in tricky , tricky >> well, they in tricky, tricky waters. it has to be said these first three months have been desperately sad, we have the william and harry saga, but now , william and harry saga, but now, they are looking very thin on they are looking very thin on the ground. i don't think that's a problem in itself for the royal don't buy into royal family. i don't buy into this idea that this whole idea that the monarchy is in crisis. think monarchy is in crisis. i think we'll through just we'll come through this just as we'll come through this just as we years. been we have over 35 years. i've been reporting this family , there reporting on this family, there have many crises, and have been many, many crises, and it will come good, i think, but it will come good, i think, but it is a very changing picture with social media the way it is. and that is an evil place, particularly, i think, when it comes to celebrity and the royals, and i personally feel so sad that catherine has had to at
10:27 am
z= be made aware of , ”be made aware of what 7 , ”be made aware of what is? least be made aware of what is being said about her on social media, and this breaks my heart because i just think this is a woman in the prime of life who has been cut down, failed in some way. that's taken out of the public gaze for three months. and she deserves the time and the space, and she deserves just not to have people speculate about her health, her innards, her body, her mind . innards, her body, her mind. it's too much. >> yeah. i mean, i was saying before you know, there could be a mental health issue going on or a long term physical health problem she might not to problem she might not want to talk about. doesn't have to talk about. she doesn't have to talk about. she doesn't have to talk everything. you know, talk about everything. you know, people she's people are still she's still a human being at the of the human being at the end of the day. and just feel that day. and i just feel that everyone's of pushing and everyone's sort of pushing and pushing pushing and she pushing and pushing and she should alone. should just be left alone. that's my opinion. >> agree with you. >> well, i agree with you. absolutely. a human being absolutely. she is a human being and that a very public role and that is a very public role she she's a goldfish she has. she's in a goldfish bowl. i mean, i don't know how any of us will survive the scrutiny that royal family
10:28 am
scrutiny that the royal family have withstand . have to withstand. >> jenny, i wanted to ask you about meghan markle's new brand american riviera orchard and more specifically, the timing of that announcement, because it was quite remarkable, wasn't it really ? an hour before the diana really? an hour before the diana legacy awards, this went live on instagram. do you think this was a coincidence, or do you think that was calculating calculated from meghan and team meghan ? from meghan and team meghan? >> well, you know, i am not a conspiracy theorist. i refuse to be put in that corner. so i think the best of people, if i possibly can, it is slightly strange , but you know, probably strange, but you know, probably whenever she launched that website , there would have been website, there would have been criticism, there would have been some royal event going on and people would say, oh, i mean, she wasn't going try and she wasn't going to try and upstage her husband was upstage her. her husband was she? was taking part she? and harry was taking part in that ceremony as well. so i don't think it was vindictive at all on meghan's part. and i really wish her well. what a brilliant website it looks. it's exactly what she should be
10:29 am
doing. great at all that stuff. >> see, that's why we love you, jenny. she always positive? yes. neven jenny. she always positive? yes. never. never like you in that way. never says a bad thing about anyone. that's why we love you. >> oh, jenny. lovely to see you. thank so much your thank you so much for your company this morning. thank you very let us know very much indeed. do let us know what you make about of that. what you make about any of that. whether meghan markle's new whether it's meghan markle's new lifestyle she's lifestyle brand, you know she's going selling like going to be selling things like jams and glasses, jams and spreads and glasses, things but to be things like that. but to be fair, that's what jenny just said. when harry and meghan left the royal family, they said they wanted to be financially independent. to be fair to independent. so to be fair to her, on she started a her, on them, she started a business doing it. business there and doing it. yeah that's how you do it. yeah and that's how you do it. that's you money. that's how you make money. >> got think when people, >> you got to think when people, if sit around and don't if people sit around and don't do people criticise. if people sit around and don't do you're ople criticise. if people sit around and don't do you're outs criticise. if people sit around and don't do you're outs critictrying so when you're out there trying to yeah yeah. to go for it, yeah i think yeah. >> it's a bad thing. and for >> it's not a bad thing. and for many people sure they would many people i'm sure they would say that she's say it's better that she's making than making netflix making jam than making netflix documentaries the royal documentaries about the royal family. know what family. but do let us know what you views at gb news. you think. gb views at gb news. com her in the com which would put her in the pickle would her a pickle which would put her in a pickle. very good, very, very
10:30 am
good. know what? good. do you know what? i actually the turning in actually see the cogs turning in your actually see the cogs turning in youoh, mate, that's what i'm >> oh, mate, that's what i'm doing. tell. okay, doing. you can tell. okay, i can't tell now . can't tell now. >> anywhere, as we've >> i don't go anywhere, as we've still lots come the still got lots to come on the show next, we're going to be show up next, we're going to be meeting founder scotty's meeting the founder of scotty's little the most little soldiers. it's the most incredible charity. going incredible charity. we're going to in just a to tell you about that in just a few moments. this is saturday
10:31 am
10:32 am
10:33 am
gb news. good morning. welcome back. you are watching saturday morning live. we had breaking news in the past 20 minutes or so that vaughn gethin has been elected as the next welsh first minister. wanted your reaction on that? loads of you getting in touch, adrian says as someone from wales, the appointment of the vaughn gethin first the crook vaughn gethin as first minister disaster minister for wales is disaster for labour has failed. the people of wales , raw photos now, people of wales, raw photos now, interestingly enough , duncan interestingly enough, duncan says leave kate alone. a lot of celebrities need time out of the
10:34 am
pubuc celebrities need time out of the public eye after an abdominal tuck. it's perfectly normal. >> i don't know if she's had an abdominal tuck. >> i don't know if he's symbolically means that people need time out when something happens. yeah, maybe he meant that. >> i don't think she's had plastic surgery, malcolm plastic surgery, and malcolm says royal pictures says formal royal pictures should be taken and issued by professional photographers. it's simple . then you wouldn't have simple. then you wouldn't have this debacle. geraldine says this debacle. and geraldine says it's disgraceful how she is being hounded. same what you being hounded. same as what you agree geraldine . do agree with you, geraldine. do keep those views coming in on any of the that we're any of the stories that we're talking today. gb at gb talking about today. gb at gb news.com. love hear news.com. we do love to hear from you now this show we're from you now on this show we're all shining a light all about shining a light on amazing people who do amazing things. week's greatest things. and this week's greatest briton is nikki scott. >> yep, nikki is the founder of scotty's little soldiers, an incredible charity which offers bereavement support and care for children whose parents have died while serving in the armed forces. >> yes, nikki founded the charity in 2010 after her husband, lee scotty scott, was killed in 2009 while on active
10:35 am
service in afghanistan, with the second royal tank regiment. >> now, nikki's story is heartbreakingly but unfortunately not unusual as scotty's little soldiers are currently providing bereavement support for over 650 military children and have pledged to support over 1000 bereaved military children by 2030. that's incredible. >> it is just the most incredible work . so, nikki, incredible work. so, nikki, welcome to saturday morning live and a huge congratulations. you are this week's greatest briton and you are truly incredible. the work that you do. tell us a little bit more about scotty's little bit more about scotty's little soldiers , because this is little soldiers, because this is so important to you and so personal. yeah. >> so, it's not just me, by the way. there's, like, a team behind me, and our supporters are incredible. but, i set up scotty's because when lee was first killed, obviously, you know, our world fell apart. i was 28. i just thought life's done. you know, kai was five, brooke was seven months. and then as time went on, i started to realise that, you know, i
10:36 am
started to think about how many other bereaved children are going this. there was going through this. there was such support for such limited support for bereaved military children. so many military many great uk military charities, but real limited support for the children. so yeah , i didn't quite know what yeah, i didn't quite know what i was doing or how to do it, but had the passion and drive and yeah, the response been yeah, and the response has been incredible . there are so many incredible. there are so many children. seeing the children. are you seeing the most photos here of lee? >> you make the most beautiful couple. do you even begin to couple. how do you even begin to explain children what explain to your children what happened to their dad? >> are that the hardest thing you've you know, you do. and actually, i feel like even now, it's like nearly 15 years on, it can still , you know, you still can still, you know, you still have those moments where it just feels unreal and actually you tell your child once, but actually, you know, they were five and brooke was seven months, so i've probably had to tell them like a loads of times throughout life. and as throughout their life. and as they they understand they grow and they understand more, ask questions they grow and they understand morithey ask questions they grow and they understand morithey want; questions they grow and they understand morithey want to questions they grow and they understand morithey want to know, estions they grow and they understand morithey want to know, you>ns they grow and they understand morithey want to know, you know, and they want to know, you know, you just say he was killed you can't just say he was killed in action. they want to know in action. they now want to know where, happened
10:37 am
where, how, why, what happened that you know. so that morning, what you know. so you're over again and you're going over it again and again and as grow. again and again as they grow. >> what point? because >> and at what point? because i've always wondered this. when someone a someone has gone through a bereavement yourself. bereavement like yourself. yeah. at point turn around at what point do you turn around and well, okay i've, and think, well, okay i've, i've, i've been able to sort of do as best as i can to overcome this bereavement. now i'm going to go and help others. at what point did that happen. >> oh, it's all a blur if i'm honest, i was in a really dark place and because i had two young children, i was having to get out of bed. you know, kai was like, i want coco pops. i want coco pops, you know? so i was to up, i was having to get up, but, i didn't here, i'm didn't want to be here, if i'm honest. know, was really honest. you know, i was really in a dark. it was. lee was just. yeah. he was 26, and he was just a, you a real life full of a, you know, a real life full of life and. but i went on holiday nine months after lee was killed. i didn't want to go. that was another. i was like, i don't want to go on holiday and watch all having fun. watch families all having fun. but my cousin was like, come on, come come come on, you're going to come and it was that i saw and it was at that point i saw kai in the swimming
10:38 am
kai laughing in the swimming pool his cousins, i pool with his cousins, and i kind it so corny, kind of had. it sounds so corny, but had that, like lee would but i had that, like lee would be going like, need be going nuts. like, i need to. i help children. i need to help these children. and started to and then, yeah, started to wonder others had wonder how many others had experienced the death of a parent weren't getting the parent and weren't getting the right parent and weren't getting the rigiit is incredible to you, >> it is so incredible to you, andifs >> it is so incredible to you, and it's such a testament you >> it is so incredible to you, and yousuch a testament you >> it is so incredible to you, and yousuch table ament you >> it is so incredible to you, and yousuch table t0|ent you >> it is so incredible to you, and yousuch table to take you that you were able to take your grief your there grief and your pain, and there was much pain there and put was so much pain there and put it and channel it into something as incredible scotty's little as incredible as scotty's little soldiers. just it's soldiers. it is just it's a testament to your strength and also the fact that you could see that there gap there where that there was a gap there where people needed support and help, justyeah. and there still is. >> yeah. and there still is. don't get me like we've don't get me wrong. like we've done work, offer many done amazing work, offer so many different services now to these children actually children because actually it's not just about death of not just about the death of their it's also these . their parent, it's also these. if you're living in a military garrison, that's your home because living it. i was because you're living it. i was living an house. that's living in an army house. that's kai school . you you move often kai school. you you move often move moved back to move back to i moved back to where my family were. so that was. you're just when you're used that military community used to that military community where around you where everyone around you serves, then you're out of serves, and then you're out of it. so scotty's is about also
10:39 am
bringing them back to that community again and being around others who truly understand what it's like. >> and your children obviously are always going to be proud of their dad. >> yeah, i hope so, yeah, definitely. >> but the flip side, too, >> but on the flip side, too, they're going to be proud they're going to be very proud of because you're doing of you because what you're doing is showing you're is you're you're showing you're both showing how both of you as parents do amazing things for your community. and thank you, the people. and that's, that's that's huge. yeah. >> and i also just i think it's really important, if you don't mind me just quickly saying that it's , you know, lee was killed it's, you know, lee was killed in served in the in action. he served in the army, much army, but scotty's is very much about a whole. about the military as a whole. so doesn't matter if, you so it doesn't matter if, you know, there's people know, if there's people out there listening, it doesn't matter whether raf, army, matter whether it's raf, army, navy they all served navy reserves. they all served our country. it doesn't matter whether they died by suicide, killed in action, illness and even now, supporting children of veterans as well because they served our country. they deserve to have their children looked after. so that yeah, it's really important to say, nikki, how proud feel? proud do you feel?
10:40 am
>> you allow yourself to feel >> do you allow yourself to feel proud you see, can we get proud when you see, can we get those again of those pictures up again of remembrance day sunday? you remembrance day sunday? and you will from will recognise this scene from remembrance sunday. you will remembrance day sunday. you will see little soldiers. see scotty's little soldiers. now, it you. you'll now, i've said it to you. you'll see november. it's see it every november. it's those yellow scarves, those black and yellow scarves, isn't you walk isn't it? and you always walk along at the back. there's a large group of you now. yeah. you over and look at you must look over and look at that of all those scarves that sight of all those scarves and think, i did that. i've created this . created this. >> to be fair, there's not enough time to sit back and have many of those moments, but it does the team really proud, does make the team really proud, especially when, you know, it took for us to get took a long time for us to get children and young people on that were that parade, and then we were put back and then, yeah, put at the back and then, yeah, we came to nearer the front where belonged to yeah where we belonged to be. so yeah . and just the children . and just to see the children there proud of their parent there so proud of their parent service and, you know, it means so much to them to see people clapping and standing out there for an hour. right. >> great photos. >> that's great photos. >> that's great photos. >> just. it really is. >> she was so little. oh it's just incredible what you do. >> scott is an absolute >> nikki scott is an absolute honour you today. thank honour to meet you today. thank you. for everything
10:41 am
you. thank you for everything you. thank you for everything you especially to those you do and especially to those military and all military children and all the support them. just support you give them. it's just the most wonderful initiative. thank the most wonderful initiative. thathank you. thanks coming on. >> yeah. now lots more to come. but up next we're going to be diving into world of baking diving into the world of baking to could celebrate to see how you could celebrate saint patrick's day tomorrow. looking to and looking forward to that. and you're your greens. wonderful. >> ready to eat. >> ready to eat. >> is saturday morning live >> this is saturday morning live on news on gb news, britain's news channel
10:42 am
10:43 am
10:44 am
>> welcome back. now, it could be a huge weekend for ireland. the rugby today , saint patrick's the rugby today, saint patrick's day tomorrow. and a bank holiday on monday. this could be a massive weekend of celebrations for the irish. well, gb news, northern ireland reporter, dougie beattie. what is going on? >> well good morning, good morning britain. yes. good morning britain. yes. good morning peter. good morning ali and welcome to instonians rugby club because this is where rugby is really made . and you're quite
10:45 am
is really made. and you're quite correct. this could be six nafions correct. this could be six nations today, saint patrick's day tomorrow and hangover monday, if it all goes to plan . monday, if it all goes to plan. and rugby is really it is a massive sport here in ireland. and it's part of the reason that we are constantly in the top three in the world. and actually joining me now is a man that that may be partly responsible for this type of thing. this is roy lawton. he is known as rugby roy. and he he takes these kids, from a very early age here. roy, why is irish rugby so powerful? >> well, we are investing in grassroots rugby, as soon as they can walk . almost. we have they can walk. almost. we have rugby tots here, and they basically start from two years of age. now, obviously, it's non—contact at that age. and then they move into primary school. p1 two and three is non—contact, and then from p4 onwards we introduce them to the contact session . contact session. >> well there you go. from an early age from toddlers we have them playing rugby. and of
10:46 am
course the gaa trains of to catch a ball above their head as well. so it makes it all even more interesting and makes it much more of a better weekend for ourselves. if ireland can do the job with scotland today, well, good luck guys. >> the weather. i'm hoping the weather will be better for years and in australia we have rugby of course, but we also have aussie rules, which basically means anything goes, means no rules. anything goes, anything well , anything goes. yeah, well, dougie beattie really good to see you. dougie beattie really good to seethank dougie beattie really good to see thank you very much dougie beattie really good to seethank you very much indeed. >> thank you very much indeed. we're stick the we're going to stick with the saint patrick's day theme now because is because this weekend is a weekend of celebrations for the irish. but we can all get involved. perhaps spot of involved. perhaps with a spot of baking. so delighted now baking. so we're delighted now to by author and baker to be joined by author and baker melanie i wish melanie johnson. and i wish smellovision was a thing, because the smell right now in the studio is absolutely incredible. >> that's just ellie. >> that's just ellie. >> oh stop it, you smell good as well. but mel, welcome to saturday morning live and what have you brought in for us? this looks amazing. i wanted to bring a selection. >> of saint patrick's >> so because of saint patrick's day, bring guinness day, i had to bring a guinness punt. one is chocolate.
10:47 am
punt. so this one is chocolate. so looks like a guinness. a so it looks like a guinness. a glass guinness. got the glass of guinness. it's got the white it does. and it's white top. it does. and it's chocolate. the chocolate. and it's got the little tang of the guinness actually cake itself. and little tang of the guinness actueof' cake itself. and little tang of the guinness actueof course cake itself. and little tang of the guinness actueof course we le itself. and little tang of the guinness actueof course we havezlf. and then of course we have a lamington bundt especially made for pete. >> oh am j is for pete. >> oh amj is that an for pete. >> oh am j is that an aussie? >> oh am j is that an aussie? >> yes, it's an aussie thing. >> yes, it's an aussie thing. >> you don't understand how australian that is. lamington is. >> oh, i hope is.— >> oh, i hope i've is. >> oh, i hope i've got it right. ihope >> oh, i hope i've got it right. i hope i've got it right. >> oh, so you've made all of these especially for us? absolutely. oh, we'll have to try some then. should we have a little straight little try? let's get straight in try with in there. should we try with this you a little bit this one. would you a little bit i guess you to try the. i guess you want to try the. >> no. >> no. >> i was going to say what is this one here? >> that one that is rose pistachio and chocolate. love that. and that's that. and then so and that's like like it's called like it's like it's called a snickerdoodle like it's like it's called a snic a rdoodle like it's like it's called a snic a doughnut. so you'd like it. >> you it.- >> you are. it.— >> you are. you're very it. >> you are. you're very welcome here. pete's to be very here. pete's going to be very happy you. happy with you. >> like saint andrew's >> it feels like saint andrew's day. okay. that day. yeah okay. that wasn't funny. >> e’- @ want to try, >> what do you want to try, pete? and then we'll. >> yeah. >> yeah. >> i'm going lamington, if that's now, know >> all right. now, you know i really i've done it right. really hope i've done it right. >> i hope you will have done.
10:48 am
we're to do a little taste we're going to do a little taste test now. >> was born in australia, so >> i was born in australia, so you would were you would think, were you. right? you were born oz. you would think, were you. rigwhereabouts?re born oz. you would think, were you. rig whereabouts? born 'n oz. you would think, were you. rig whereabouts? born 'n (in >> whereabouts? born in oz in perth. i love perth, yeah. >> whereabouts? born in oz in perth. do we perth, yeah. >> whereabouts? born in oz in perth. do you'erth, yeah. >> whereabouts? born in oz in perth. do you feel yeah. >> whereabouts? born in oz in perth. do you feel like h. >> whereabouts? born in oz in perth. do you feel like you get >> so do you feel like you get an australian in your an australian influence in your in your baking? >> do you know i think that we sort take influences from sort of take influences from everywhere. just think, everywhere. i just think, yeah, there's as there's no such thing as a whole. you have whole life there's no such thing as a whole.yom have whole life there's no such thing as a whole.you havee whole life there's no such thing as a whole.you have differentole life where you have different influences different places influences from different places and think just absorb and i think we all just absorb everything. we create everything. and then we create our on that. our own style based on that. amazing. you like a slice amazing. would you like a slice or. would like some of the >> i would like some of the guinness cake, please. i'm going to now and to go irish, please. now and i should got a cake me. should have got a cake for me. >> it should have gone pop on here. >> and you had quite a romantic introduction to baking, didn't you? were in you? you obviously were born in australia, but then spent australia, but then you spent a lot time in austria, didn't you? >> e- e— >> yes, i grew up in austria, and in austria they have. and so in austria they have. these these. they these are just like these. they have these everywhere. everywhere you go they have. it's a kugelhopf over it's called a kugelhopf over there. have. it's like half there. they have. it's like half chocolate. vanilla chocolate. half vanilla is it good? it yummy? good? is it yummy? >> this is, this is like bake >> oh this is, this is like bake off when you get the high note. >> i've just had a >> i feel like i've just had a handshake.
10:49 am
>> it's not often. it's not often gets a lamington, right. >> oh , god. >> oh, god. >> oh, god. >> god, that looks amazing >> thank god, that looks amazing . but then look. >> so i've got that one. so that is gooey. >> so i've got that one. so that is gooey . oh it is. is super gooey. oh it is. >> look at pop that on >> look at that. pop that on there. there so there. that on there okay. so this guinness bundt. so this is the guinness bundt. so and does look like a pint of and it does look like a pint of guinness. exactly. so it's really moist and chocolatey. can you that the inside. and you see that on the inside. and then what's the frosting. >> and that is a cream frosting. >> oh yummy yummy yummy so good. >> oh yummy yummy yummy so good. >> but can definitely taste >> but you can definitely taste the it can you? yes. >> well, i don't really like guinness, but i'm going to give it a go. >> it's not it's just like >> well it's not it's just like a tang background which a tang in the background which is it go so well with is what makes it go so well with the cream frosting. so the sour cream frosting. so yeah, but is very, very good, mel. >> but she didn't get hug. mel. >> no: she didn't get hug. mel. >> no frosting n't get hug. mel. >> no frosting shake. hug. >> no frosting shake. >> no frosting shake. >> busy stuffing my >> too busy stuffing my face. i will give you cuddle in just will give you a cuddle in just a moment because it's amazing. >> i would try that >> i would love to try that doughnut. the doughnut one. >> want to do are you >> all i want to do is. are you amazing? sorry. austria. oh, yes. for us to explain yes. it's hard for us to explain to is when to you how nice this is when we're studio and get we're in the studio and we get treats like and we wish treats like this, and we wish you just have some. you could just have some.
10:50 am
>> but not the lamington, >> yes, but not the lamington, because >> yes, but not the lamington, becau does absolutely amazing. >> like amazing. >> nothing like home baking, though. make such a huge though. it does make such a huge difference. everything tastes so much when it's homemade much better when it's homemade and and know that and fresh, and you know that there's in it . and fresh, and you know that there's in it. there's there's nothing in it. there's no preservatives, no no no preservatives, no additives, what you've put no no preservatives, no addi it,as, what you've put no no preservatives, no addi it, which what you've put no no preservatives, no addi it, which inhat you've put no no preservatives, no addiit, which i think'ou've put no no preservatives, no addiit, which i think is|'ve put no no preservatives, no addiit, which i think is so�* put lovely. >> well, it's so interesting that you say that because we were talking about in the were talking about this in the briefing, this morning? >> so sorry, hear. >> so sorry, i can't hear. i don't talking don't know what you're talking about. enjoying this. about. i'm just enjoying this. >> busy stuffing his face. >> i do a lot of baking now, but i think generationally we are perhaps love of perhaps losing our love of baking. and our baking. yes. and our our knowledge of baking. i'm one of the only people friendship the only people in my friendship group well . and we group that bakes well. and we laugh at me. >> yeah, it's the >> convenience? yeah, it's the convenience now, isn't it? just because it's so easy to go and order or get it order something or get it delivered you can delivered or, you know, you can just any supermarket, but just go to any supermarket, but it's yeah, it's shame. i it's yeah, it's a shame. but i guess, i mean, things programs like off, they do like the bake off, they do really people really encourage lots of people to cathartic and to bake, and it's cathartic and it's fun, actually. >> it's actually nice for couples do because i was couples to do because i was never into it at all. and emily, my wife, was very much into
10:51 am
baking. was into cooking, just baking. i was into cooking, just cooking, cooking. cooking, cooking, cooking. and then saturday said, then one saturday she said, let's something with the let's just do something with the kids bake together. kids and let's bake together. and loved it. obviously, i and i loved it. obviously, i preferred yes but it preferred eating it. yes but it was just yeah, it's a wonderful thing, i for families to do. >> no, it's so it's do.— >> no, it's so it's so do. >> no, it's so it's so special. but also with particularly with buns , it's so easy to take a buns, it's so easy to take a really recipe of just really simple recipe of just a sponge cake. and you put it in one these pretty tins and it one of these pretty tins and it suddenly turns into a celebration cake. suddenly turns into a celebrati(is cake. suddenly turns into a celebrati(is itike. suddenly turns into a celebrati(is it about bunts that >> what is it about bunts that you love so now, well, you love so much now, well, mainly. mainly because mainly. mainly it's because i grew up having them. so for me, it's quite nostalgic and, you know, my grandmother used to make it's got a real make them. so it's got a real sort warm family feeling for me. >> they just look so fun. >> they just look so fun. >> and they also turn out, >> and they also just turn out, you take an ordinary vanilla you can take an ordinary vanilla sponge cake and it into sponge cake and turn it into something that like celebration. >> this is amazing. this well, the doughnut one want to try. the doughnut one i want to try. >> you'd like that one. >> i knew you'd like that one. look, wants that now. oh, look, he wants that one now. oh, look, a slice cut for look, i've got a slice cut for you. don't mind my fingers. try a that one's super a bit, but that one's super pretty because it's got the marbled inside. pretty because it's got the ma i'led inside. pretty because it's got the ma i don't inside.
10:52 am
pretty because it's got the ma i don't know inside. pretty because it's got the ma i don't know if side. pretty because it's got the ma i don't know if wee. pretty because it's got the ma i don't know if we can. oh, yeah. >> let's get some of that. so i'll face and actually i'll stop my face and actually be what camera you be useful. what camera would you like you like like this up at? would you like to see the inside of that? >> see the colours? >> see the colours? >> you go. it's like >> there you go. it's like a rainbow in there. >> know, i could, if you >> you know, if i could, if you had this thing where, if you could one for the rest could have one food for the rest of your life. >> i'd be very happy to >> yes. i'd be very happy to have rest my life. >> you'd be happy the bundt. >> thank you. >> thank you. >> and you do have an irish connection as well, because obviously connection as well, because obviousispent time in austria, spent time in australia. saint patrick's australia. but saint patrick's day lived day tomorrow. and you've lived in ireland? >> lived ireland. my >> i lived in ireland. my daughter born in ireland. so daughter was born in ireland. so ihave daughter was born in ireland. so i have really fond i have really lovely, fond memories baking memories of ireland and baking in baking in in ireland and baking in ireland. i it's just the ireland. i mean, it's just the most. such a beautiful most. it's such a beautiful place. ireland place. and the food in ireland is just focus fresh >> it's just focus on fresh people, isn't yes people, isn't it? yes >> so beautiful. yes. beautiful produce. grown produce. everything's grown locally yeah. saint locally. it's. yeah. so saint patrick's mean, why patrick's day is. i mean, why not celebrate with some guinness and there's nothing better, isn't there? >> you can see the influence. you've obviously travelled far and can see australia , and wide. you can see australia, you see austria, you can see you can see austria, you can see ireland. your baking . ireland. yes. in your baking. and have focus on fresh
10:53 am
and you have a focus on fresh produce and baking at home and baking at home. >> i just think baking is also very therapeutic because it's something can do with something that you can do with your children, or can do it your children, or you can do it for people. if someone's coming for people. if someone's coming for afternoon tea, there's just nothing than baking nothing better than baking a cake when they come. so it's cake for when they come. so it's really family and really it's about family and love and life and everything that all that encompasses. that all of that encompasses. >> this is your book here, >> so this is your book here, mel. this is tell us mel. this is bundt. tell us about the cookbook . about the cookbook. >> is my baby. it took >> the book is my baby. it took me ages to write. so much love has gone into it and i really explore everything that you can do with a bundt pan and my favourite thing that i discovered is that you can make the most amazing panna cotta. oh really? in a bundt pan. and it just turns out looking so pretty. >> can you make one of these in a thermomix ? a thermomix? >> i don't know about a thermomix, but you can do it in an air fryer. >> he's obsessed an air fryer. >> yeah, you can do an air fryer that yeah, i love that. so that way. yeah, i love that. so check that out. yes, on my instagram did one just and instagram i did one just and yeah it turned really well yeah it turned out really well of course. >> p
10:54 am
e absolutely >> oh well mel it is absolutely wonderful . wonderful to meet you. >> where can be the guinness? >> where can be the guinness? >> i'm gonna get yourself in there. where people this there. where can people get this cookbook, everywhere. there. where can people get this coo amazon verywhere. there. where can people get this cooamazon verywh> amazon or any bookshop, any bookshop, any good bookshop. >> go. bundt. the >> there you go. bundt. the cookbook. johnson really cookbook. mel johnson, really good this morning. good to meet you this morning. thank get thank you so much. indeed. get yourself baking this weekend. there's very there's no excuse. it's very easy. just need a funky tin like this. god, that's heavier than i expected. absolutely incredible. thank expected. absolutely incredible. tha might be the yes >> might be the best. yes >> might be the best. yes >> yeah, i thought that's amazing. >> wow. >> wow. >> now, do you stay with us? lots more to come, including our showbiz selection , more of showbiz selection, more of today's top stories. and of course, arushi williams from jls will joining us later on. not will be joining us later on. not one to . miss. one to. miss. >> looks like things are heating up. boxt boilers sponsors of weather on . gb news. weather on. gb news. >> good morning. >> good morning. >> welcome to your latest gb news weather from the met office. it was a bit of a
10:55 am
brighter and drier start for most of us this morning. however, low pressure is very much returning towards uk, much returning towards the uk, bringing cloud bringing some rain and cloud pushing way north and pushing its way north and eastwards the rest of eastwards through the rest of saturday. can already start saturday. we can already start to see across of to see this across parts of wales england, wales and southwest england, with cloudy skies and with some very cloudy skies and that heavy rain pushing north and particularly and eastwards, particularly heavy across parts of northern ireland. parts ireland. this afternoon. parts of scotland, northeast england and southeast as and into southeast england as well, holding on to that well, perhaps holding on to that sunshine a little longer. sunshine for a little longer. and another mild day. and it'll be another mild day. temperatures above temperatures widely above average, 12 or 13 degrees, average, still 12 or 13 degrees, but perhaps not quite as mild as we've over recent days. we've seen over recent days. through rest of saturday, through the rest of saturday, that of rain continues to that band of rain continues to push its way north and eastwards. overnight saturday and into the start of sunday, turning particularly heavy over parts scotland. could even parts of scotland. we could even see over the hills see some snow over the hills here, a briefly drier here, despite a briefly drier interlude for the southern half of further rain pushes of the uk, further rain pushes up southwest through up from the southwest through the of sunday the early hours of sunday morning , leading to very mild morning, leading to a very mild night here. lows of only around 10 but perhaps 10 or 11 degrees, but perhaps a little cooler under any clearer skies north for northern
10:56 am
skies further north for northern ireland and parts of scotland, it will be a much drier start to the morning again. of the morning again. plenty of sunshine and further sunshine around and further south pushes out south once that rain pushes out towards east, it will be towards the east, it will be a dner towards the east, it will be a drier afternoon plenty drier afternoon here. plenty of sunshine , sunshine for sunshine, sunshine on offer for most by the afternoon. most of us by the afternoon. however, showers bubbling however, some showers bubbling up these could turn up and these could turn particularly across particularly heavy across the midlands and other mild day as well. of or degrees, well. highs of 15 or 16 degrees, so average the time of so above average for the time of year. yeah >> that warm feeling inside from boxt boilers sponsors of weather on
10:57 am
10:58 am
10:59 am
gb news. >> good morning. i'm peter andre, alongside ellie costello, who's just broken a nail. and this is saturday morning live. >> yes. very dramatic here this morning, but very good to have your company. morning, but very good to have your company . and we have got an your company. and we have got an action packed show for you,
11:00 am
don't we? we'll have all of the day's stories with our day's top stories with our panel day's top stories with our panel. ceo founder of panel. the ceo and founder of the youth uk, alex cairns, the youth vote uk, alex cairns, and entrepreneur and social commentator jarjue . commentator joanna jarjue. >> and quantity over quality . >> and quantity over quality. that's the question being asked to the rising number of women who are having children later on in life. when it comes to fertility . fertility. >> and of course, we'll get you fertility. >> of|d of course, we'll get you fertility. >> of your course, we'll get you fertility. >> of your latest, we'll get you fertility. >> of your latest showbiz at you fertility. >> of your latest showbiz news, all of your latest showbiz news, obviously, of big news of the week is the line—up for glastonbury. ellie phillips will be here giving us all the latest and rac williams from jls is joining us. >> dear friend of mine, he's been hard working on this new album, this new song that's out, which embraced both his african canbbean which embraced both his african caribbean culture and london upbringing, and we can't wait to have great guy have him on great guy. >> and of course, remember, we want to hear from you. this show
11:01 am
is nothing without you. so do keep us company. you can email us gb views at gb news. >> com but before we do anything else, tatiana sanchez has all your news headlines. how do you know ? know? >> peter. ellie. thank you. your top stories from the gb newsroom. economy minister vaughan gething has been elected as the welsh labour leader, and he'll succeed mark drakeford as the first minister of wales. he beat his only rival, the education minister, jeremy miles .today education minister, jeremy miles . today he also becomes the first black leader in any european country. mr gething won't take over as first minister until wednesday, when a vote will be held in the senate after 25 years of devolution . he after 25 years of devolution. he says he remains committed to the cause. >> today we turn a page in the book of our nation's history, a history that we write together , history that we write together, not just because i have the honour of becoming the first
11:02 am
black leader in any european country , but because a country, but because a generational dial has jumped to like ken and jane. devolution is not something that i have had to get used to or to adapt to, or to apologise for. devolution. welsh solutions to welsh problems and opportunities is in my blood. >> tory mps have reportedly held secret talks to oust the prime minister and install penny mordaunt as leader of the conservatives according to the telegraph. a meeting has taken place between a group of right wing tories and mps who supported ms mordaunt in the previous two leadership elections . this previous two leadership elections. this comes previous two leadership elections . this comes after elections. this comes after a week that saw former tory deputy chairman lee anderson join the reform uk party, and rishi sunak rule out a general election in early may. senior a political analyst at orthodox conservatives david moore , told conservatives david moore, told gb news this morning the change might be what's needed to boost
11:03 am
pubuc might be what's needed to boost public confidence. >> conservative party have had so many leaders. i think people are frustrated. the membership is frustrated, the voters are frustrated, in fact, apathetic. a lot of voters are very worried about getting out to vote at the moment, and we need some certainty, quite frankly, and we need conservative need strong conservative leadership. some people need strong conservative leade and). some people need strong conservative leadeand). penny1e people need strong conservative leadeand). penny mordaunt need strong conservative leade and). penny mordaunt as think and see penny mordaunt as a vehicle for that. with a strong background in defence at the moment. a lot of people are very unhappy at the moment and the membership especially, but at the moment general at the moment the general election is looming, this could be may, this could in be in may, this could be in october, but the conservatives need to come that election. need to come into that election. united sadiq khan has issued a plea for lib dems and green supporters to back him as he seeks a third terms as the mayor of london in a pitch to fellow progressives, mr khan is launching what he describes as a love letter campaign as he visits kingston in southwest london to persuade supporters of other parties to lend him their votes. >> in the election. the mayor said he was under no illusion
11:04 am
about his chances, saying he could lose to the conservative susan hall due to changes in the voting system . thousands of voting system. thousands of shoppers won't get their online groceries delivered today. sainsbury's have announced that they can't fulfil most of their onune they can't fulfil most of their online orders because they're experiencing technical difficulties. the company also says that some stores are also affected and they're working hard to fix the issue . and hard to fix the issue. and finally, traffic is already building up with the first ever planned daytime closure of the m25. drivers have been 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 morning. it's the first scheduled daytime all lanes shut down on the m25 since it opened in 1986. travel expert simon calder says it needs to be done. >> the main problem is that a3, m25 junction just a couple of miles away from here, when it
11:05 am
was built in the 1980s, it was fine , but now there's so much fine, but now there's so much traffic using it and 80% of the traffic using it and 80% of the traffic on the a3 wants to switch to the m25 . you're always switch to the m25. you're always getting hold ups there. very high accident rate there. and so therefore to clear it all up they're going to widen things, give people extra opportunities to join and leave the motorways . to join and leave the motorways. >> for the latest stories you can sign up to gb news alerts by scanning the qr code on your screen. or you can go to gb news common alerts. now it's back to ellie and pete . ellie and pete. >> thanks, tatiana. now we're going to be joined by a very exciting guest later on in the show. that's harris williams from jls, a dear friend of mine, as he's launching a solo music career. he says we'll bring him back to his roots. yes, we're going to be sitting down with rishi after 11:30 to hear going to be sitting down with risiabout after 11:30 to hear going to be sitting down with risiabout what'si:30 to hear going to be sitting down with risiabout what's happening next
11:06 am
all about what's happening next in career . in his career. >> for now, stay home this weekend and decorate your bathrooms or something. that is the advice being given to thousands of drivers following the unprecedented closure the the unprecedented closure of the m25 five, with many anticipating gridlock, traffic over the weekend, drivers are being warned to stay away from a five mile stretch in surrey between junctions ten and 11, which is now shut until 6 am. on monday. well, it's the first scheduled daytime all lanes shutdown of the m25 since it first opened in 1986. >> well, gb news reporter ray addison is there right now. so, ray, tell us what's going on and how people are feeling about this. because it looks it doesn't look too bad at the moment. >> yeah. i've stood on alongside the a320, which takes us through the a320, which takes us through the leafy village of ottershaw in surrey. this is part of that diversion that we've been talking about between m25 junction ten and 11. now about 3000 people live here in this village. they were warned that
11:07 am
up to 6000 vehicles could be travelling along this road every hourin travelling along this road every hour in both directions , and hour in both directions, and that did cause some concern. however, so far , although we've however, so far, although we've seen an increase in lorries, they say there's been less cars than they expected. this is what locals had to say . locals had to say. >> well, it might do and a lot of people were worried. obviously i've just done the local park run. they normally have plus. there's have 100 or plus. there's probably only 50 today where people haven't so yeah, people haven't driven. so yeah, i'd be more concerned about the ambulance just down the road there that they're able to get out. if there's any problems as well. >> i've got a problem. it's brilliant. it's brilliant. every day. close it every day. why. well because there's no traffic. well because there's no traffic. we can go anywhere. my wife got to work in 15 minutes this morning. yes, absolutely. >> i've just been to addlestone and back. addlestone is one of the areas supposed to the areas which is supposed to have been through to have been diverted through to increase of traffic. increase the amount of traffic. i won't say it's completely deserted, but for a saturday morning it is. there is no queue
11:08 am
down to the roundabout here on the chobham road. normally you've got about 10 or 11 cars queuing up. nothing. what is happened , what has happened is happened, what has happened is that publicity is put out to people don't travel and they're not. >> so as we're hearing there some concerns about the local ambulance station which is up the road, there . so far, though, the road, there. so far, though, nothing has materialised. south east coast ambulance saying if we do come through, please get out of our way. but so far no heavy disruption here in ottershaw. yeah >> ray addison so far so good. let's hope that way. let's hope it stays that way. thank very indeed . now thank you very much indeed. now this morning we are delighted to be joined by the ceo and founder of the youth vote uk, alex cairns, and entrepreneur and social commentator joanna jarjue is on our panel. very good to see you both this morning . and see you both this morning. and shall we start with a totally different story this morning ? different story this morning? this is louis walsh, and if you're watching this years
11:09 am
series of celebrity big brother, you will you will know what louis walsh has been talking aboutis louis walsh has been talking about is the fact that he's been diagnosed or he's had a battle with a rare blood cancer and nobody knew anything about it. joanna. >> yeah, we all kind of >> yeah, i mean, we all kind of remember louis, don't we, from, x factor, and he's a very much loved character. louis always used to be the one that would kind of take all the cookie axe and all the quirky ones. and so it's kind of sad to know that, you know, somebody who's that lively and we know lively on camera. and we know him kind of beloved him as this kind of beloved character always in character that's always been in our rooms. we've been our living rooms. so we've been going something like going through something like this, obviously it's this, but obviously it's incredibly brave to incredibly brave for him to actually something. so actually share something. so private about this diagnosis that but also, you know, that he had. but also, you know, when things like this happen with people who are public figures, it also brings a lot of awareness. and a lot of people have been watching brother. awareness. and a lot of people have iobviously1ing brother. awareness. and a lot of people have iobviously talking brother. awareness. and a lot of people have iobviously talking abouter. awareness. and a lot of people have iobviously talking about it we're obviously talking about it now. is type of now. and this is the type of blood that i'd never blood cancer that i'd never heard so i always kind of heard about. so i always kind of appreciate people like him appreciate when people like him come share their come forward and share their kind stories . kind of health stories. >> i it is incredible,
11:10 am
>> i mean, it is incredible, isn't it, really what it would do awareness for people? >> for sure. and i think it's really important i think really important because i think quite these quite often people watch these programmes and it can be a little and arguments little bit silly and arguments and but actually when and stuff, but actually when someone of someone that's got a lot of media attention, like louis walsh this, of walsh talks about this, a lot of people start think, you know, people start to think, you know, cancer a lot of cancer research, do a lot of good work. >> of people, my family >> a lot of people, my family have been through cancer. it's a tough anyone to go tough illness for anyone to go through. know, tough illness for anyone to go ti lot gh. know, tough illness for anyone to go tilot of. know, tough illness for anyone to go tilot of people know, tough illness for anyone to go tilot of people might know, tough illness for anyone to go tilot of people might go know, tough illness for anyone to go tilot of people might go on now, tough illness for anyone to go tilot of people might go on to iv, a lot of people might go on to their and research it their website and research it and think, you i'm and might think, you know, i'm going donate. good on him going to donate. so good on him for courageous to talk for being courageous to talk about for being courageous to talk aboyeah. ironically, he's done >> yeah. ironically, he's done it at a time where caused it at a time where he's caused so and so so much controversy. and so everyone's about everyone's been talking about him. so actually him saying it now because everyone's now is great because everyone's listening, been listening, but man, has he been controversial putting putting this thing aside. yeah, this terrible thing aside. yeah, he's been controversial, hasn't he? >> he has. i mean, i'll be honest, i'm not shocked that he's doing that . he's a very he's doing that. he's a very marmite figure, you know, you know, a lot of us have seen what jedward have been saying about louis walsh behind the scenes. you a very kind of a you know, he's a very kind of a lot of people say he's quite a
11:11 am
nasty you know, he's nasty figure. you know, he's been show business a long been in the show business a long time. get time. he knows how to get certain people certain certain people to do certain things, he's he's things, and i think he's he's great for the programme, though, because, know, that's what because, you know, that's what we right? we reality we want, right? we want reality tv exactly how it is. tv to be exactly how it is. >> know, he's a bit of >> you know, he's a bit of a story for you. yeah. i was in a dressing room one day and louis walsh was in there. there was about seven there, and walsh was in there. there was ab we're all here. >> you want to know i speak, i don't speak english. >> that's actually one thing that i thought in terms of casting for celebrity big brother. did really good brother. they did a really good job and louis in job getting sharon and louis in there. getting all the there. we're getting all the hollywood you who hollywood gossip. you know who they don't like. they like, who they don't like. and i think simon grey. >> was good. yeah, yeah , yeah. >> no, that has been really interesting actually this year. so is louis walsh you so what is louis walsh like? you
11:12 am
know, we're not know, you're not done. we're not done with you, to be honest. >> he's always been lovely. lovely you. lovely to you. >> everyone's to you >> but everyone's lovely to you because so lovely. that's because you're so lovely. that's true, but he he's got true, so. but yeah, he he's got some stories. >> give us little >> he's. give us a little nugget. you've the tiniest nugget. you've heard the tiniest bit here. >> a colourful character. >> see a colourful character. >> see a colourful character. >> yes that's how >> colourful? yes that's how you. you he's like you. when you said he's like marmite, to think you marmite, you got to think you can bit of marmite in your can put a bit of marmite in your bolognese tastes good. bolognese and it tastes good. >> yeah. >> yeah. >> orbits host. >> lovely. >> lovely. >> anyway talking. there's >> yeah. anyway talking. there's something i wanted to talk about. is a, don't know about. this is a, i don't know why i'm bringing this up, but it's the guardian eight. it's on the guardian page eight. mushrooms tampons. let mushrooms for tampons. now, let me explain . ocado customers me just explain. ocado customers were the least likely to have received a substitution 17, but it still managed, that 17% had ordered tampons, but got mushrooms instead. now i'm a bit confused about this because obviously there's not mushroom. >> yeah . very good. you're >> yeah. very good. you're saying if you use them, what were you trying to say? well, i'm not a tampon. there's not much room. that's what you're trying to say. yeah.
11:13 am
>> no, you know exactly what i mean. i just don't the mean. i just don't get the concept that. concept of that. >> it's supermarket but >> it's supermarket swaps, but supermarket wrong. >> because you can't put wrong. >.mushroom.:ause you can't put a mushroom. >> yeah, someone like me >> yeah, but someone like me reading would think, oh, reading that would think, oh, is it substitution? that's why it a substitution? no that's why i'm let me tell you now, i'm saying, let me tell you now, you put mushroom . you cannot put a mushroom. >> and our second, where a tampon should joanna can tampon should be and joanna can back on that one. back me up on that one. >> second that. >> i'll second that. >> i'll second that. >> did i bring this one up? >> why did i bring this one up? i saw it, and was like, i just saw it, and i was like, what your what clearly caught your eye? >> on the topic. >> the expert on the topic. i know you can some really know you can get some really random swaps, can't you, in your supermarket do supermarket swaps when they do this. >> e you're e you're ordering >> so when you're ordering onune >> so when you're ordering online don't have the online and they don't have the item so give you item that you want. so give you a yeah, a substitute item. yeah, sometimes very, very random. >> yeah. so i actually used to work part time at waitrose. and >> yeah. so i actually used to virememberme at waitrose. and >> yeah. so i actually used to viremember we at waitrose. and >> yeah. so i actually used to viremember we used|itrose. and >> yeah. so i actually used to viremember we used to ose. and >> yeah. so i actually used to viremember we used to havernd >> yeah. so i actually used to viremember we used to have to do i remember we used to have to do this and it was quite stressful. and times, and to be honest, at times, sometimes know, sometimes let's say, you know, if have strawberries, if they don't have strawberries, you think, let me you might just think, oh, let me put raspberries in, but just don't it's don't understand how it's completely will completely different item will be different aisles like supermarket box. >> i mean, because sainsbury's are of a problem at are having a bit of a problem at the they? where are having a bit of a problem at the where they? where are having a bit of a problem at the where theirthey? where are having a bit of a problem at the where their techs where are having a bit of a problem at the where theirtechs gone, they where all their techs gone, their gone down. so it's
11:14 am
their techs gone down. so it's going anyone wanting going to be anyone wanting mushrooms substitute. it's mushrooms as a substitute. it's not happen. not going to happen. >> going get anything, >> you're going to get anything, probably but if they probably nothing. but if they get tomorrow, they be get it tomorrow, they might be able difference. able to taste the difference. >> good, very very good. >> oh very good, very very good. >> oh very good, very very good. >> i love that he's delighted with himself. that's excited. no, but this is this is serious isn't it? >> so this is the vast majority of online deliveries today will not able fulfilled, not be able to be fulfilled, says sainsbury's , because says sainsbury's, because they've suffered technical issues stores . i mean, issues at some stores. i mean, this is the thing, technology is great. whilst it works. >> joanna. >> joanna. >> exactly. and actually when i saw the mushroom versus tampon thing, the first thing i thought was, know, when it was, oh god, you know, when it gets a point where there gets to a point where there isn't people, you like isn't people, you know, like alex years ago who were actually packing manually, it packing it manually, when it becomes machines, becomes just machines, just i well, i don't know how well, i don't really know how i actually would pick, you know, put a correlation between a tampon and a mushroom. that would be very, very bad in terms of cases eyes actual of the cases eyes actual capability. just of capability. but it just kind of shows how reliant we are on technology. and i've been really guilty of being one of those people that's like, fine, if
11:15 am
we're going to have a, you know, cashless society. i only ever have my iphone. everything's apple pay, everything's done through my phone. but actually when down, when it goes down, it's a disaster . and we saw it as well disaster. and we saw it as well yesterday mcdonald's as yesterday with mcdonald's as well. it systems going well. there it systems going down. then this it down. and then also this it really does cause chaos. then everybody gets on twitter. it's a when instagram goes a bit like when instagram goes down well. down as well. >> everyone to twitter, >> everyone runs to twitter, instagram complain . instagram and complain. >> so can be, you know, quite bad. >> are we too reliant on technology, especially in our shops, you think? shops, do you think? >> think we are. but i still >> i think we are. but i still wouldn't get rid of it. you know i would you love to i would still. you know, love to go that direction because it go in that direction because it happens in in a blue happens once in a, in in a blue moon. i never carry cash anyway. and it's small inconvenience. and it's a small inconvenience. maybe year for maybe one day in a year for a whole load of convenience. >> interesting what you said, because just dawned on me because it just dawned on me that the other my that that the other day my daughter, princess, she said to me, no, instagram's gone me, oh no, instagram's gone down. i was like, and it's not, it's not on. i said, i know i get what you mean, but what's the problem, well, it's down like it was a world, a huge
11:16 am
world issue. and, you know, times have changed like that. yeah, because i would have never i mean, in our, in our day, i can't believe i'm actually saying, you know what? >> have that would >> i would have never that would have if your phone have never been if your phone line down. line was down. >> just go the phone lines >> you just go the phone lines down. know. go outside down. i know. yeah go outside and play. >> we have expectation, >> but we have this expectation, don't now? everything to don't we now? but everything to be there and be instantaneous and there and available for us. and you couldn't just be like, well, i'll for a instead or i'll go for a walk instead or i'll go for a walk instead or i'll read book. yeah well, i'll read a book. yeah well, it's our generation, right? >> i think, you know, >> and i think, you know, actually know you're actually know what you're talking the day. talking about. the other day. i'll guilty i'll be honest, i'm guilty of this. to this. like, i went on to instagram i was like, why is instagram and i was like, why is it not working? >> not working? >> not working? >> what am i going to scroll through now? and then you through now? like, and then you just to tiktok, luckily. just go to tiktok, luckily. but i it's it ridiculous. >> it worst tiktok >> isn't it the worst tiktok instead? done this instead? yeah i've done this before don't know if before and i don't know if anyone else has ever done this, but i've been looking but when i've been looking at a book i've that book or something i've done that i've gone to. i've gone to, i've gone to. >> yeah. i've gone to, i've gone to. >> picture. yep yep yep yep yep. >> picture. yep yep yep yep yep. >> you've gone to the >> obviously you've gone to the text book. text on a book. >> is it the age? >> is it the age? >> and i'm really, really guilty of also of watching tv but also scrolling. be
11:17 am
scrolling. i can't i'll be watching but into it watching a series but into it and to be so bad. and i tend to be so bad. >> yeah, yeah, i've even heard of triple screens now, of the triple screens now, especially on weeknight, especially on a weeknight, as people telly on the people have the big telly on the laptop then have people have the big telly on the laptphone. then have the phone. >> oh, that's okay, maybe that's me . yes. me as well. yes. >> are things that they're >> these are things that they're talking have like talking about. you can have like multiple screens. >> i that. multiple screens. >> yeah. i that. multiple screens. >> yeah. mad, that. multiple screens. >> yeah. mad, very. multiple screens. >> yeah. mad, very briefly. plans day. are we plans for paddy's day. are we doing you're in your doing anything you're in your green. very irish. oh, yeah. i actually got the memo. >> got the memo, got the memo. i missed the memo. yeah. no i never really usually am celebrate paddy's day, but i went to newcastle university and there's people from there's a lot of people from belfast go to newcastle. belfast that go to newcastle. >> so it used be a massive >> so it used to be a massive kind thing. obviously they kind of thing. obviously they celebrate, but that's just kind kind of thing. obviously they ce as rate, but that's just kind kind of thing. obviously they ce as fare, but that's just kind kind of thing. obviously they ce as far as�*ut that's just kind kind of thing. obviously they ce as far as it that's just kind kind of thing. obviously they ce as far as it goes. ; just kind kind of thing. obviously they ce as far as it goes. i'vet kind kind of thing. obviously they ce as far as it goes. i've tried of as far as it goes. i've tried guinness once, say i loved guinness once, can't say i loved it now. >> interesting you say that because there's a story in the papers today. it's daily papers today. it's on the daily mail it tastes better mail saying it tastes better with music. so where are with irish music. so where are you an irish pub at the time? you in an irish pub at the time? because think it makes because i think it makes a difference. >> n difference. >> i was in >> i was actually i was in belfast the first time that i tried, guinness, but actually, tried, guinness, but i actually, i this actually
11:18 am
i can imagine this actually being because obviously being a thing because obviously if you go to certain restaurants, you get certain pairings food. pairings with kind of food. it's about ambience it's about the ambience and it's about the ambience and it's about and whatever. about the smells and whatever. and you know, the and sometimes, you know, the environment transport you. environment can transport you. maybe you into the maybe it transports you into the most irish. >> i don't know, i'm afraid we're out of time . otherwise we're out of time. otherwise i'll you about guinness, i'll ask you about guinness, alex. sure can have alex. but i'm sure you can have a weekend. we have a lovely weekend. we have whatever you're to and try whatever you're up to and try the cake well the guinness cake as well as i will. alex and joanna. thank you very indeed. very much indeed. >> still come, going to >> still to come, we're going to be iconic jls band be joined by iconic jls band member irish williams. but member irish williams. yes, but up quality quantity . up next, quality over quantity. >> and how does that apply to your fertility rate? this is saturday . saturday morning live on.
11:19 am
11:20 am
11:21 am
gb news. welcome back to saturday morning live. we love getting your emails. we've had so many this morning, haven't we? >> we have , talking about the >> we have, talking about the royals photo. now, jen says we should leave kate alone. i agree
11:22 am
with you, the surgery was with you, jen. the surgery was obviously major, and has anyone thought reason the thought that the reason the palace is it palace aren't telling us? is it may be frightening for the children what their mum children to know what their mum has done? children to know what their mum has good.ione? children to know what their mum has good. yeah, maybe that's. >> good. yeah, maybe that's. maybe a good do maybe that's a good point. do keep them in shopping. keep them coming in on shopping. and this news that the supermarket sainsbury's , supermarket chain sainsbury's, their tech has gone down today. so got an online so if you've got an online delivery sainsbury's, delivery with sainsbury's, probably not going to be delivered we've also been delivered today. we've also been talking in talking about substitutions in onune talking about substitutions in online shops and swaps that are done item isn't in done when your item isn't in stock. pauline says i once ordered towels and ordered sanitary towels and sainsbury's sent me fabric conditioner. i'm still trying to find out the logic on that one. very good. yes. >> yeah, and on scotty's little soldiers, duncan says here. it's lovely see someone thinking lovely to see someone thinking of children's minds in a positive way, especially nowadays. are nowadays. these children are also be also veterans and should be treated heroes . treated like heroes. >> yeah, absolutely. >> yeah, absolutely. >> well, do keep those of you coming in really, really good to hear from you this morning. and now women now we're talking about women having babies a later age, having babies at a later age, aren't this morning we are aren't we. this morning we are tara tana ramsay sorry victoria coren mitchell and miranda kerr
11:23 am
are just some of the women in the limelight that are having children at an older age. yes. culture, and economy culture, society and the economy has changed over the has changed so much over the past years. and now births past few years. and now births among women over has risen by among women over 50 has risen by 15. you believe so? is it 15. would you believe so? is it really as simple as quantity over quality when it comes to your fertility? well, to answer this, we are joined by fertility and nutrition coach claire inniss. really good to see you this morning, claire. and we're talking about quantity over quality or more quality over quantity. because if women are waiting longer to have children and we know that they are, you have much fewer eggs. but your message is it's about the quality of them. >> yep. absolutely. so my message is the quantity. the amount of eggs you have is completely outwith your control. we can do nothing about that. but the quality. yes that does decline over age. but the three months before an egg is ovulated is pivotal and if you we can
11:24 am
make massive lifestyle changes. the three months before an egg is ovulated to improve its quality by improving egg quality, does two really important things. it improves the chance of actually becoming an embryo and it adds extra protection against miscarriage. so it's massive. and i can't believe everyone isn't talking about this. >> yeah, i feel like that's not something that's out there in the public realm. so it's actually the three months before you're conceive that you're looking to conceive that you're looking to conceive that you really focusing on you should be really focusing on your what can women your health. what can women be doing time? your health. what can women be doiimy time? your health. what can women be doiimy favourite1e? your health. what can women be doiimy favourite question. so >> my favourite question. so there's lots lifestyle things there's lots of lifestyle things that they can do. and the reason i'm so passionate about this is they don't need a prescription. it's things that they can do for themselves. so managing their nutrition really well, making sure they're getting the right dietary fats. so dietary fats, especially the unsaturated ones, they help us create hormones. it's all about getting our body in this lovely, lovely homeostasis to have a baby. so we want to make really healthy
11:25 am
eggs. we want to eat properly. good lean protein is close to the mediterranean diet as possible and the right supplements as well. so most women will go gung ho and they'll have a week of taking everything and eating lettuce and everything organic. everything and eating lettuce and everything organic . and and everything organic. and it's, you know, massaged by virgins. and it's all wonderful. you don't need to do that. you just need to be consistent with the important things. keep hydrated, eat your vegetables, don't kid yourself on your eating vegetables. actually eat your vegetables . yeah, and just your vegetables. yeah, and just be nice to yourself. >> and what about contraception? i mean, is that is that damaging? you're taking damaging? if you're taking contraception? no. >> so the barrier methods is absolutely not damaging because that's not that's not affecting hormones at all. and for the vast, vast, vast majority of women, contraception is not going to make a difference to their long term fertility. there's going the odd there's going to be the odd exception. it's really not exception. but it's really not something that you need to worry about. contraception is right when it's right. if you don't want to have a baby, don't
11:26 am
stress that. so, so many stress about that. so, so many women i work with are women that i work with are riddled with guilt because they were contraception. or maybe were on contraception. or maybe they used to smoke and they blame but that must blame themselves, but that must be a strange mind shift for women that you work with where they've spent their whole lives trying not to get pregnant, being on contraception, and all of a sudden they're like, oh, i do want a baby now. >> and then all of a sudden they have switch their body around have to switch their body around and body do that? can and can your body do that? can your just switch itself your body just switch itself from not conceiving from obviously not conceiving to being from obviously not conceiving to beiiwell, can't do it >> well, it can't do it overnight. i feel overnight. i mean, i feel ovulatory a month ovulatory cycle takes a month for most women. if women are thinking having a baby in the thinking of having a baby in the short term, definitely come off contraception 3 to 6 months before you want to actually start. it's a long time trying, but the mind does happen. but the mind shift does happen. that quickly. like literally so many women i work with have spent whole life terrified spent their whole life terrified of and then spent their whole life terrified of just and then spent their whole life terrified of just wake and then spent their whole life terrified of just wake up and then spent their whole life terrified of just wake up onend then spent their whole life terrified of just wake up one morning they just wake up one morning and they see babies everywhere, and they see babies everywhere, and can think. and that's all they can think. >> is nature? do you think? >> is that nature? do you think? because mum a similar because my mum said a similar thing, had me later in
11:27 am
thing, she had me later on in life, was career life, but she was a career woman. whilst elizabeth for her was woman. yeah. and woman. whilst elizabeth for her was wanted woman. yeah. and woman. whilst elizabeth for her was wanted to 'oman. yeah. and woman. whilst elizabeth for her was wanted to putin. yeah. and woman. whilst elizabeth for her was wanted to putin.offah. and woman. whilst elizabeth for her was wanted to putin.off as and woman. whilst elizabeth for her was wanted to putin.off as late she wanted to put it off as late as could and she said it was as she could and she said it was literally an overnight thing. she wanting she went from not wanting children at all to i need to be a mother. and then you just a mother. yeah and then you just expect your body to keep up with that. >> and they don't recognise themselves the stories themselves either. the stories they're telling not they're used to telling and not noticing. kids not noticing. kids and just not being bothered, and all of a sudden and must sudden they're just and i must have baby. need a baby right how. >> now. >> i think it shows just how amazing the body is. >> i think it shows just how am yeah,the body is. >> i think it shows just how am yeah, you body is. >> i think it shows just how am yeah, you must body is. >> i think it shows just how am yeah, you must seedy is. >> i think it shows just how am yeah, you must see that. >> i think it shows just how am yeah, you must see that with >> yeah, you must see that with emily what's that? she's emily now. what's that? she's just incredible mother, just the most incredible mother, isn't looks don't isn't she? it looks like i don't know what like at home, know what she's like at home, but when i've seen her looks like it doesn't faze in like it doesn't faze her in the slightest. she's the most natural most natural mother, the most beautiful takes it beautiful bump. it takes it all in stride. yeah. in her stride. yeah. >> is. i've got nothing to >> she is. i've got nothing to complain thank you very complain about. thank you very much. you, claire. much. and thank you, claire. thank much. so more thank you so much. so lots more to come on show today, to come on the show today, including meeting the amazing iris williams from jealous. i wasn't cutting you off, by the way. interesting. way. oh, no, it was interesting. thank hearing all about his thank you. hearing all about his latest this is saturday latest venture. this is saturday morning news, morning live live on gb news, britain's channel. morning live live on gb news, brityou're channel. morning live live on gb news, brityou're all channel. morning live live on gb news, brityou're all right. nel. morning live live on gb news, brityou're all right. you're >> you're all right. you're forgiven. >> do?
11:28 am
11:29 am
11:30 am
11:31 am
>> good morning. your top stories from the gb newsroom. economy minister vaughan gething has been elected as the welsh labour leader. has been elected as the welsh labour leader . and he'll succeed labour leader. and he'll succeed mark drakeford as the first minister of wales. he beat his only rival, the education minister, jeremy miles, with just over 51% of the vote. he also becomes the first black leader in any european country. mr gething won't take over as first minister until wednesday , first minister until wednesday, when a vote will be held in the senate . tory mps have reportedly senate. tory mps have reportedly held secret talks to oust the prime minister and install penny mordaunt as the leader of the conservatives, according to the telegraph. a meeting has taken place between a group of right wing tories and mps who supported mr mordaunt in the previous two leadership elections. this comes after a
11:32 am
week that saw former tory deputy chairman lee anderson join the reform uk party and rishi sunak rule out a general election in early may. thousands of shoppers won't get their online groceries delivered today. sainsbury's have announced that they can't fulfil most of their online orders because they're experiencing technical difficulties. the company also says that some stores are affected and they're working hard to resolve the issue , and hard to resolve the issue, and traffic is already building up. with the first ever planned daytime closure of the m25 since it opened in 1986, drivers have been warned to stay away from a five mile stretch in surrey between junctions ten and 11, which has been shut until 6:00 on monday morning . for the on monday morning. for the latest stories, you can sign up to gb news alerts by scanning the qr code on your screen. or you can go to gb news complex.
11:33 am
thanks, tatiana. right, it's time for your weekly dose of showbiz news, and we're delighted to have showbiz journalist ellie phillips, who is glowing. >> oh, i you and you >> oh, i love you guys. and you say that you look amazing. it is all the makeup, but i'll take it right now. pregnant is right now. this pregnant mama is like, ready for all the like, i'm ready for all the compliments. okay. compliments. it's okay. >> before we get into this, >> oh, before we get into this, me you a little me and you just had a little chat.i me and you just had a little chat. i hope you don't mind. we were talking about you were talking about how, you know, sleep, you can't know, when you sleep, you can't sleep your back of sleep on your back because of the. >> lie on the. >> you cannot lie on your back like just, like, like your body is just, like, absolutely not. >> it's actually >> no, no, it's actually quite dangerous for baby because, dangerous for the baby because, well. pushes down on well. and you it pushes down on parts the body that of parts of the body that kind of help the baby. but you help get to the baby. but you physically can't, so you to physically can't, so you have to sleep side. sleep on your side. >> and we as husbands go to >> and so we as husbands go to spoon our wives we're spoon our wives and we're putting arms their putting our arms around their belly. tell they're belly. and you can tell they're thinking, can you your hands belly. and you can tell they're thirme?, can you your hands belly. and you can tell they're thirme?, carleave your hands belly. and you can tell they're thirme?, carleave me/our hands belly. and you can tell they're thirme?, carleave me alone. nds off me? you leave me alone. >> yeah, yeah we have.
11:34 am
>> yeah, yeah, yeah we have. >> yeah, yeah, yeah we have. >> i saying a >> i was saying we have a massive pregnancy pillow thing. my massive pregnancy pillow thing. my even get to me. massive pregnancy pillow thing. i\am even get to me. massive pregnancy pillow thing. i\am hawt. even get to me. i am like a hawt. >> there a built around >> there is a fort built around me like, do not touch me. me and, like, do not touch me. oh, that is so funny. i love oh, that is so, so funny. i love the fact you are going the fact you guys are going through this the same time. through this at the same time. yeah, know, and you. yeah, i know, and you. >> i really can't say going >> i really can't say i'm going through anything. >> i really can't say i'm going through eyeah,1g. you're like, >> i really can't say i'm going throfari eyeah,1g. you're like, >> i really can't say i'm going throfar off eah,1g. you're like, >> i really can't say i'm going throfar off now. g. you're like, >> i really can't say i'm going throfar so now. g. you're like, >> i really can't say i'm going throfar so exciting. you're like, >> it's so exciting. >> it's so exciting. >> yeah, i've only got three weeks. >> yeah, yeah, yeah, exactly. >> yeah, yeah, yeah, exactly. >> you'll to normal glastonbury. >> i know, completely >> i know, just completely change the subject. glastonbury. what are your thoughts on this week's line—up? so this year's line—up, year's line—up has line—up, this year's line—up has just announced, just been announced, so we've got got lipa, got friday, we've got dua lipa, saturday, got coldplay, saturday, we've got coldplay, and scissor, and sunday we've got scissor, and sunday we've got scissor, and legend and then also the legend slot, which isn't classed as one of the but shania the three headliners. but shania twain legend. the three headliners. but shania tweh legend. the three headliners. but shania twel mean, legend. the three headliners. but shania twel mean, that's legend. the three headliners. but shania twel mean, that's a.egend. the three headliners. but shania twel mean, that's a great,. the three headliners. but shania twel mean, that's a great, great >> i mean, that's a great, great for me. >> t- t— >> shania twain. amazing how with think i've got every with you i think i've got every single albums. seeing with you i think i've got every single not albums. seeing with you i think i've got every single not it.)ums. seeing her live not done it. incredible. sadly. probably her live not done it. incredbecauseily. probably her live not done it. incredbecause ir. probably her live not done it. incredbecause i will)bably her live not done it. incredbecause i will probably won't because i will probably be giving at the yeah, giving birth at the time. yeah, they'll be birthing child. they'll be birthing a child. i think shania twain think for me, shania twain is great. feeling great. people are feeling a little let because it's little bit let down because it's the history that the first time in history that two headliners slots have two of the headliners slots have been taken by women, but dua lipa , very much a pop artist lipa, very much a pop artist kind of everywhere at the moment
11:35 am
, and scissor isn't very well known over here, is amazing. she's just won the international arts of the year at the brit awards. she was the most nominated artist this year's nominated artist at this year's grammys , so she is incredible. grammys, so she is incredible. but people she's not but people are like, she's not a household name. exactly. and then to have coldplay as the kind representatives , kind of male representatives, it's their fifth time headlining glastonbury. like , glastonbury. so people are like, can't we get someone else? >> come on. »- >> come on. >> oh, understand that. >> oh, i understand that. >> oh, i understand that. >> and i think when we were told that probably a that they would probably be a focus this year, people focus on women this year, people thought madonna us thought, you know real i'm saying know, real big. i'm not saying no dua lipa. she's no shade to dua lipa. she's great, she isn't a legend in great, but she isn't a legend in the music yet, is she? the music industry yet, is she? >> she's not earned that >> no, she's not earned that status yet. mean, doing status yet. i mean, she's doing phenomenally well internationally the internationally around the world. performances world. her live performances are incredible . i mean, this girl, incredible. i mean, this girl, if you watch her from even just a few years ago to where she is now, she's going bring it, now, she's going to bring it, she's bring it. but she's going to bring it. but i think you look back on think when you look back on previous performances you previous performances and you think of, you know, you've got like sir paul mccartney was there roses, there recently, guns and roses, you , huge, incredible you know, huge, incredible
11:36 am
performances . i you know, huge, incredible performances. i don't you know, huge, incredible performances . i don't know performances. i don't know whether it lives up to that. >> it's interesting though, if you think of the 80s or 90s even further back, 7060s, probably because there wasn't as many artists, whoever headlining artists, whoever was headlining something like that was not only a household they could not a household name, they could not walk down the street without someone from two years old to 92 years recognising them. you years old recognising them. you know , you think people like know, you think of people like elvis, jackson, madonna, elvis, michael jackson, madonna, you these guys. and you know, all of these guys. and i now there's many i guess now there's so many artists. yeah that, you know, and also it's so accessible now because you don't have to physically go to them a concert. >> you can see them a lot on television. they're television. you know, they're pumping time. pumping out music all the time. there many . i pumping out music all the time. there many. i mean, pumping out music all the time. there many . i mean, there there are so many. i mean, there are festivals this year. there are so many. i mean, there are have festivals this year. there are so many. i mean, there are have actually s this year. there are so many. i mean, there are have actually been year. there are so many. i mean, there are have actually been cancelled, 20 have actually been cancelled, but previously but the previous previously there so many there have been so many festivals so festivals where they'd play, so it like off it wouldn't be like this one off incredible having incredible occasion and having said that, they when it comes to headlining glastonbury every artist knows it's the pinnacle. so i'm excited for it because i think they will bring it. but personally, for me, shania twain , i mean, that was a good get. >> yeah, that would be
11:37 am
absolutely incredible. i hope she horse like she comes in on a horse like we've do. we've seen her do. >> would be amazing. >> oh, it would be amazing. >> oh, it would be amazing. >> she's already said, >> she and she's already said, you i'm thinking of you know, i'm thinking of costumes. i'm thinking of staging like staging and everything like that. thing is a let staging and everything like that. but thing is a let staging and everything like that. but rumours thing is a let staging and everything like that. but rumours are1g is a let staging and everything like that. but rumours are that a let staging and everything like that. but rumours are that shet down, but rumours are that she was basically too just expensive, and wanted expensive, and she wanted her madonna fee and they were like, we this. we pay about 200 grand for this. that's she's that's where we're at. and she's like, they probably that's where we're at. and she's like, 200 they probably that's where we're at. and she's like, 200 million. probably make 200 million. >> exactly . >> exactly, exactly. >> exactly, exactly. >> and also it's the exposure afterwards. but we'll see. i think it will still be really good. excited to watch good. i'm excited to watch at home, i'm there'll be home, and i'm sure there'll be more to announced as well. >> and you might have a barber by you are barbers. >> by that time i'm watching at home with the little headphone things that you can get them to protect things that you can get them to prooh okay, right. >> oh my god. okay, right. >> oh my god. okay, right. >> should talk about >> ellie, should we talk about the bafta awards? the bafta tv awards? >> week the, nominees, >> so this week the, nominees, six nominees were announced for the p&o cruises memorable moments. so this previously one. that's one that i think stands out to most people was rose ayling—ellis when she danced on strictly come dancing. the silent dance. so it's moments like that captivated like that that really captivated audience . so this is from last audience. so this is from last yeah audience. so this is from last year. so from 2023, there are
11:38 am
six nominees nominated in this and you can enter now. voting closes on the 9th of april. yeah. and if you go to bafta.org forward slash moment and you get a chance to win tickets to the ceremony, which is amazing. it's a fantastic ceremony to go. ceremony, which is amazing. it's a fenow,ic ceremony to go. ceremony, which is amazing. it's a fenow, i ceremony to go. ceremony, which is amazing. it's a fenow, i believe ny to go. ceremony, which is amazing. it's a fenow, i believe we 10 go. ceremony, which is amazing. it's a fenow, i believe we have a clip >> now, i believe we have a clip of one the nominees. oh no, of one of the nominees. oh no, it's a float, i'm afraid. oh, it is beckham tree . is from the beckham tree. >> yes. so the beckham documentary on netflix. everyone will without will know this, even without having to it say it's when having to hear it say it's when david kind of takes the david beckham, kind of takes the mick out of victoria beckham about working class about her working class upbringing, and he forces her to admit her dad drove a rolls admit that her dad drove a rolls royce when she was younger and took school, everyone took him to school, and everyone be honest, be honest, be honest, be honest, be honest, be honest, be pushes the pushes be honest. pushes the pushes it and was like, and everyone was like, do you know needs grill know what? he needs to grill politicians because not politicians because he's not leaving there. leaving without the truth there. so really so that was really good. >> you what, ellie? that >> do you know what, ellie? that has cultural moment has become a cultural moment because morning you because even this morning you weren't doing weren't there. i was doing a video georgia about you and video with georgia about you and how is work with how lovely it is to work with you our manager you and jake, our floor manager was honest. you and jake, our floor manager viwas honest. you and jake, our floor manager viwas doing honest. you and jake, our floor manager viwas doing the honest. you and jake, our floor manager viwas doing the beckham t. you and jake, our floor manager viwas doing the beckham . i was doing the david beckham. so it become this moment. so it has become this moment.
11:39 am
>> is what is. >> this is what it is. >> this is what it is. >> these moments. >> it's these moments. >> it's these moments. >> , pete, drop off >> all right, pete, drop me off in rolls—royce. exactly. in a rolls—royce. yeah, exactly. exactly how it really is. >> and other moments we've got doctor is when doctor who for fans is when ncuti revealed as the ncuti gatwa was revealed as the 15th again an 15th doctor, which was again an iconic moment and happy valley. if fans of that, it's if anyone's fans of that, it's when there's a final showdown. >> is the winner. >> this for me is the winner. >> this for me is the winner. >> that one is for you. >> that one is for you. >> catherine tommy's final >> catherine and tommy's final showdown . if showdown in the kitchen. if you've valley and showdown in the kitchen. if y0lme valley and showdown in the kitchen. if y0lme you, valley and showdown in the kitchen. if y0lme you, if valley and showdown in the kitchen. if y0l me you, if you valley and showdown in the kitchen. if y0lme you, if you haven't|nd let me tell you, if you haven't watched that watched it, that is my recommendation to you. the best thing ever. think. thing on tv ever. i think. >> it's intense. >> it's so intense. >> it's so intense. >> scene. >> it's incredible scene. >> it's incredible scene. >> very >> it's very intense, very intense, succession intense, very brutal. succession i'm not going to say what happensin i'm not going to say what happens in it, because if you've not it, it's a massive not seen it, it's a massive spoiler, of the end spoiler, but it's one of the end bits succession . the last of bits of succession. the last of us and share us when bill and frank share some wine and one that i think will have the potential to do really the piano. it's, really well is the piano. it's, a 4 series hosted a channel 4 series hosted by claudia winkleman . and it was claudia winkleman. and it was when a 13 year blind girl when a 13 year old blind girl called played to commuters called lucy played to commuters in leeds, the incredible in leeds, the most incredible rendition of a showpiece, which is incredibly difficult and basically brought everyone to tears because she was just so in
11:40 am
the moment , tears because she was just so in the moment, and it was so perfect that you had famous perfect that you had a famous pianist called lang lang who was watching, he like, how watching, and he was like, how is possible ? she's 13. watching, and he was like, how is possible ? she's13. how is this possible? she's13. how has she learnt this? how she has she learnt this? how is she remembered is she remembered this? how is she playing beautifully? and playing it so beautifully? and it's like it's that good that like generationally , like my dad generationally, like my dad phoned me afterwards and was like, lucy? like, did you see lucy? >> i love lucy, so i think there's a of moments there. there's a lot of moments there. i what shows the i think what it shows is the range that you have on television at the television in the uk at the moment really good moment is really, really good for see in those for people to see in those moments either uplift moments that can either uplift you, your heart, you, break your heart, shock you, break your heart, shock you, laugh. yeah you, or make you laugh. yeah yeah, but voting that is yeah, but voting for that is open yeah, but voting for that is ope it's the power television , >> it's the power of television, isn't it? ellie, really wonderful you today. wonderful to see you today. >> much for coming >> thank you so much for coming into and bringing into the studio and bringing us lovely well. into the studio and bringing us lowyou well. into the studio and bringing us lowyou look well. into the studio and bringing us lowyou look amazing. >> you look amazing. >> you look amazing. >> thank you. do you stay with us?we're be joined in >> we're going to be joined in the very soon by your the studio very soon by your friend, member boy band friend, the member of boy band jls, richie williams. we're going all about what the going to hear all about what the future holds for him as a solo artist. is saturday morning artist. this is saturday morning live gb news. live on gb news. >> exciting
11:41 am
11:42 am
11:43 am
11:44 am
i >> welcome back to saturday morning live. thank you so much for your company this morning. just going to share a few of your emails . we're talking about your emails. we're talking about a replacement for sunak. a replacement for rishi sunak. apparently penny mordaunt is now the favourite, from the favourite, graham from brighton says i believe that penny mordaunt would be the best next tory pm, whereas elaine thinks that suella braverman would make an excellent pm. she says how it is she's outspoken and honest. and dave, you could put a donkey in a blue rosette out in front of the tories and it wouldn't make a blind bit of difference to the direction of this . you do not mince this country. you do not mince your words, dave. thank you so much for your emails. do keep them coming in. >> very excited about this, ladies and gentlemen, because, our next guest, he's an icon. he's from a group that was an icon. now he's an icon on his own. i am talking about this guy
11:45 am
. here's the music. i own. i am talking about this guy . here's the music . i can't hear it. >> oh, i don't think it's going to play, so don't worry, don't worry. >> oh, here we go. your hands up, everybody in love, come. >> your hands up in the in love. >> your hands up in the in love. >> come on, put your hands up. okay i know all the way. yeah, yeah, you got it, you got it. >> yes. okay. ellie? yes okay, okay. what are we doing that we're the show we're doing that before the show as well. yes. >> is a member the >> he is a member of the legendary boy jls , and we legendary boy band jls, and we are so excited to be joined by him morning. is a rush. william. >> hey guys. >> 5 announced >> hey guys. >> announced the >> who has now announced the launch his solo music career launch of his solo music career that hear bringing that we hear is bringing you back to your roots. it's really good stuff. so good to have you with us this morning. >> much. >> so much. >> so much. >> yeah, good to see you. >> yeah, so good to see you. >> yeah, so good to see you. >> of all, you're >> you first of all, you're a great a great friend. >> you first of all, you're a great a a great friend. >> you first of all, you're a great a dear| great friend. >> you first of all, you're a great a dear friend, friend. >> you first of all, you're a great a dear friend, but|d. >> you first of all, you're a great a dear friend, but you're >> you first of all, you're a greincredible friend, but you're >> you first of all, you're a greincredible songwriter you're >> you first of all, you're a greincredible songwriter ,'ou're >> you first of all, you're a greincredible songwriter , youe an incredible songwriter, you know, don't think a lot of know, and i don't think a lot of people that from you people have seen that from you yet. mean, hearing the new yet. i mean, hearing the new stuff doing, which yet. i mean, hearing the new sticoming doing, which yet. i mean, hearing the new sticoming back doing, which yet. i mean, hearing the new sticoming back to oing, which yet. i mean, hearing the new sticoming back to your which is coming back to your roots, but stuff writing is but the stuff you're writing is excellent . excellent. >> thank you so much. yeah. i mean, you know, i'm an
11:46 am
independent now for. independent artist now for. yeah, very long time, yeah, for a very long time, obviously, part the obviously, i was part of the major label corporate structure. and me now , i'm at and i think for me now, i'm at this period of my life where this period of my life where this chapter of life where this chapter of my life where i just really wanted to just completely authentically completely be authentically myself and in order to do that, sometimes you have to just kind myself and in order to do that, so stripnes you have to just kind myself and in order to do that, so strip away>u have to just kind myself and in order to do that, so strip away a have to just kind myself and in order to do that, so strip away a lotfe to just kind myself and in order to do that, so strip away a lot of,o just kind myself and in order to do that, so strip away a lot of, you;t kind of strip away a lot of, you know, the huge kind of commercial things around you and just pretty much just kind of have those quiet moments where you just write songs write you just write songs and write honestly how you feel from the heart and really kind of hear your thoughts out loud. your own thoughts out loud. >> yeah, it's amazing to >> and yeah, it's so amazing to see side of you because see this side of you because it's the first thing pete said this he irish is this morning, he said. irish is an songwriter, an incredible songwriter, and you that because an incredible songwriter, and you know that because an incredible songwriter, and you know your that because an incredible songwriter, and you know your time:hat because an incredible songwriter, and you know your time:hajls,:ause an incredible songwriter, and you know your time:hajls, youe you know your time in jls, you think a as a boy band. think of you as a as a boy band. yeah, but you've this yeah, but you've had this passion since were passion for music since you were a little haven't you? it's a little boy, haven't you? it's so to you. absolutely so personal to you. absolutely >> the passion >> i mean, music, the passion for because mother for music came because my mother was diagnosed with multiple sclerosis when i 12 years sclerosis when i was 12 years old, became a young carer, old, and i became a young carer, and and brother, we and myself and my brother, we came that i'd came up with a plan that i'd become musician. he'd become become a musician. he'd become a
11:47 am
medical and together medical scientist and together we would, you know, do our best to raise money create to raise money and create opportunities for our mum. so that's passion for that's where the passion for music came. and i'm very well travelled. a lot of people don't know but lived in the know, but i, i lived in the canbbean know, but i, i lived in the caribbean some time when caribbean for some time when i was boy and lived in, was a small boy and i lived in, i lived africa as well for i lived in africa as well for some time, and i came back and forth from the uk . so, you know, forth from the uk. so, you know, i've had a lot experience i've had a lot of experience that a of people don't know that a lot of people don't know about. for me right about. and for me right now, doing music is it's for me doing this music is it's for me to be able to show you who i truly that nobody really truly am, that nobody really knows. see me as the knows. they see me as the founder a group. but founder member of a group. but there's actually lot of there's actually a lot of substance and life experience. >> well, i mean, this is it when you. because we're going to play a clip of your new song in a minute. but when it comes to minute. but but when it comes to your songwriting side you your songwriting side and you was now was talking about how you now not big commercial not with the big commercial all corporate going corporate companies. yeah. going on your own. i mean, i've, i've see you everywhere as if you were with a major big, commercial company. were with a major big, commercial company . so you're commercial company. so you're actually giving a bit of hope to actually giving a bit of hope to a lot of artists out there that
11:48 am
are so scared that if they don't get signed, they can't do anything. know, can go anything. you know, you can go to label and to a distribution label and release yourself. release music yourself. >> . so releasing release music yourself. >> music . so releasing release music yourself. >> music through releasing release music yourself. >> music through sound leasing release music yourself. >> music through sound on,ing the music through sound on, which distributor. which is tiktok's distributor. there's lots options to be there's lots of options to be able know, release music able to, you know, release music independently now and take advantage things. advantage of those things. but it comes down to making sure it all comes down to making sure that you create the best music possible. this music that i'm now releasing, been working possible. this music that i'm norforeleasing, been working possible. this music that i'm norfor many, 3, been working possible. this music that i'm norfor many, many been working possible. this music that i'm norfor many, many years working possible. this music that i'm norfor many, many years now. ng possible. this music that i'm norfor many, many years now. so on for many, many years now. so it's not just something that i wrote the other and i've wrote the other day. and i've got i've got many got a buddy, i've got many bodies work. if i wanted bodies of work. if i wanted to, i release every i could release an album every month decade. month for the next decade. that's music i've got. that's how much music i've got. well little listen well let's have a little listen to we? to it, shall we? >> your your new sound. i >> to your to your new sound. i think do have a little think we do have a little clip. >> got clip that's >> we've got a clip that's playing the moment, but it we playing at the moment, but it we haven't sound at moment haven't got sound at the moment but but i've but we're seeing it. but i've heard it. heard it man i love it. >> yeah. >> yeah, yeah, yeah. >> yeah, yeah, yeah. >> did how did it make >> so how did how did it make you going. like, i mean you feel going. so like, i mean it though you were it sounds as though you were absolutely there it sounds as though you were abs(nerves there it sounds as though you were abs(nerves from there it sounds as though you were abs(nerves from going there it sounds as though you were abs(nerves from going from re it sounds as though you were abs(nerves from going from one it sounds as though you were abtheerves from going from one it sounds as though you were abthe mostrom going from one it sounds as though you were abthe most successfulfrom one it sounds as though you were abthe most successful boy| one it sounds as though you were abthe most successful boy bands of the most successful boy bands that has ever seen that this country has ever seen to be honest, it to going solo, to be honest, it wasn't so much nerves . i think wasn't so much nerves. i think if i was looking to do like what
11:49 am
i was doing with the boys by myself, then maybe. but i think for more of a soul for this is more of a soul searching journey for me. so it's more soul it's much more of a soul searching, going my searching, going back to my roots journey. know, roots journey. and, you know, obviously through , a obviously i've been through, a lot and downs, you know, lot of ups and downs, you know, i in my life from great i mean, in my life from great heights, some great lows, and i think for me, like just being in this space where i speak about things i'm passionate about, i make music that i'm passionate about, you know, is, is crucial for me. >> you know, before, because i wanted to touch on mental health as well, which i know you're a huge advocate for. but, for example , you know, i was signed example, you know, i was signed to warner brothers, i think it was 13 years ago. the was about 13 years ago. was the last released album or last time i released an album or something i can't something like that. i can't remember. and it did really well. wasn't well. and then when i wasn't with i so with warner brothers, i was so scared release because scared to release music because i thought, don't want to i thought, well, i don't want to fail, want fail. and fail, i don't want to fail. and one of the i noticed with one of the things i noticed with what doing actually what you're doing is actually you're no, you can't what you're doing is actually yotite no, you can't what you're doing is actually yotit on no, you can't what you're doing is actually yotit on your no, you can't what you're doing is actually yotit on your own. 10, you can't what you're doing is actually yotit on your own. absolutely.t do it on your own. absolutely. it's thing for it's a very scary thing for someone who's been with a big it's a very scary thing for someone to |o's been with a big it's a very scary thing for someone to do been with a big it's a very scary thing for someone to do that. with a big it's a very scary thing for someone to do that. so th a big it's a very scary thing for someone to do that. so i a big it's a very scary thing for someone to do that. so i think company to do that. so i think that's really commendable because gives hope for
11:50 am
because that that gives hope for people. i'm not saying anyone wants to hear anything. just wants to hear anything. i just say just and i'm say, can i just say, and i'm sorry interrupt you, but sorry to interrupt you, but peter got some incredible peter has got some incredible music, right? >> is a trust me, secretly, >> he is a trust me, secretly, people don't realise and give him the credit where credit's due. but you play me some records literally had to records and i literally had to turn all the way up in the car. my turn all the way up in the car. my wife was like , who is that my wife was like, who is that babe?i my wife was like, who is that babe? i said, that's, that's pete. she said, it's pete . pete. she said, it's pete. >> she's like, wow, i don't have the i never had the confidence to do it myself. so i've to do it by myself. so i've always and gone, no, to do it by myself. so i've awon't and gone, no, to do it by myself. so i've awon't do and gone, no, to do it by myself. so i've awon't do it. and gone, no, to do it by myself. so i've awon't do it. and and gone, no, to do it by myself. so i've awon't do it. and but,j gone, no, to do it by myself. so i've awon't do it. and but, but he, no, to do it by myself. so i've awon't do it. and but, but butno, i won't do it. and but, but but actually what did is actually what she did is excellent he's given excellent because he's given hope myself. so hope to people like myself. so thank that. i want thank you for that. i want to talk you. i see collab talk to you. i see a collab coming the track. talk to you. i see a collab conyou the track. talk to you. i see a collab conyou two. the track. >> you two. >> you two. >> he me something amazing. >> he sent me something amazing. oh really? >> oh well, still to >> oh well, this is still to come that's mental health come then. that's mental health right now. >> it's a problem that's not just new. it's been going on forever. men's mental health. men are starting to talk a lot more. yeah, you've been through a lot of stuff that don't a lot of stuff that people don't know a lot of stuff that people don't knoyeah. mean, the last few >> yeah. i mean, the last few years for me have been very,
11:51 am
very difficult , people, people very difficult, people, people see me on tour performing, making music , but, myself and my making music, but, myself and my wife , you know, we went through, wife, you know, we went through, two miscarriages. oh, you know, and, you know, for us, that was and, you know, for us, that was a very devastating time and very difficult to know how to kind of process those emotions and i guess as a man, i did the thing of bottling up my emotions and where i feel comfortable to, to be able to express myself is in the studio. whereas you know, she had obviously a different reaction to you know, what happened to us, because not only was it happening to her mentally , psychologically, but it was happening as happening to her physically as well . and i had seen her, you well. and i had seen her, you know, i had i had i had been by her side and seen her go through hell and back and to and together we went through that and as and i think what something that she really would wanted to see from me was that sensitivity and that emotion .
11:52 am
sensitivity and that emotion. and i thought that as a man, being was trying to being strong was trying to bottle up my emotions and just show you know, show her that, no, you know, that i'm being strong for her. but actually strong was is but actually being strong was is talking about it. and what's happened since i've started happened ever since i've started to talk about it is i've spoken to talk about it is i've spoken to more men that have experienced baby loss, and together we've been to cry together we've been able to cry together we've been able to cry together , we've been able to together, we've been able to talk about our experiences together . i talk about our experiences together. i mean, when i first kind of my wife forced out of me , you know, how do you feel? and iended , you know, how do you feel? and i ended up as a mess on the floor. i was exasperating crying almost inconsolable. she was just holding me in her arms as we cried together and we cried together, and i didn't realise i needed that release so badly. it just came out in floods of tears and emotions and ever since, like i said, i've been able to speak to other men and, and we've been able to cry together and they've, they shared their own experiences, which they did similar where they similar to me, where they thought being strong was not talking it, getting
11:53 am
talking about it, getting on with getting on with life with work, getting on with life and just trying to, you know, just soldier through. but actually, you know, as men, i feel like that conversation and that sensitivity and being able to be emotions together is everything. i've never spoken about this before , but the about this before, but the reason why i feel comfortable now is because i'm with peter . now is because i'm with peter. >> he's my friend. >> he's my friend. >> he's my brother. do you know what mean? and i just what i mean? and i just feel i feel like i'm in a safe space to be able to talk. >> well, you are rac. >> well, you are rac. >> and thank you so much for sharing that with us. honestly, i going to help so i think you're going to help so many feel like many men out there who feel like they and they can't they can't speak and they can't share you said, it's share as you said, it's so important feel you're important to feel like you're not you're going not alone. you're not going through that. through that by yourself. that. rishi, for rishi, thank you so much for coming we clip of coming in. have we got a clip of his music that we can share? his new music that we can share? >> i have to i've got some >> i have to say, i've got some technical issues. >> i say i'm glad >> i will say that, i'm glad people are getting to hear you and because know and see you because i know you as person and you're a as a person and you're a beautiful person. >> you are a beautiful person. >> you are a beautiful person. >> love that that you're >> i love that that you're coming you're being to coming and you're being able to talk thank you talk like this freely. thank you so thank you . >> thank you.
11:54 am
>> thank you. >> to you with us >> lovely to have you with us friends life now. you. friends for life now. thank you. i'm it the last i'm afraid it is the last saturday morning before saturday morning live before pete some time pete goes off to take some time off. is about to have off. as emily is about to have a baby, she's the next baby, she's due in the next couple of weeks, she? so, couple of weeks, isn't she? so, pete, wanted to you couple of weeks, isn't she? so, p> congratulations. best you are the best are the best co—presenter ever. >> wonderful to work with you. good luck to you and emily. congratulations and pip johnson is up next. >> take care. thank you for having me guys . having me guys. >> a brighter outlook with boxt solar sponsors of weather on . gb news. >> good afternoon. welcome to your latest gb news weather from the met office. so a cloudier afternoon for most of us with rain very much on its way across the uk. this all due to an area
11:55 am
of low pressure moving its way towards the uk through the rest of into the start of saturday and into the start of saturday and into the start of sunday. so those cloudier skies much of the uk and skies across much of the uk and some heavy rain for northern ireland, and parts of ireland, wales and parts of southwest england that will push its parts scotland its way into parts of scotland through this evening, turning particularly through this evening, turning particulaiareas and even some southern areas and even some snow for the hills. there'll be a brief, drier interlude across the southern half of the uk before further rain pushes its way eastwards into the way north and eastwards into the early of sunday morning, way north and eastwards into the early a of sunday morning, way north and eastwards into the early a verysunday morning, way north and eastwards into the early a very mild ay morning, way north and eastwards into the early a very mild night.ning, way north and eastwards into the early a very mild night. lows leaving a very mild night. lows of around or 11 degrees of only around 10 or 11 degrees across england wales across much of england and wales , across parts of northern ireland and scotland, though a bit start to bit of a chillier start to sunday brighter skies, sunday and some brighter skies, so as we go so some sunshine as we go through sunday morning. further south wales south across england and wales once that rain clears its way eastwards, there'll be some sunshine developing to here particularly as we head into the afternoon. will afternoon. however, there will be bubbling up and afternoon. however, there will be could bubbling up and afternoon. however, there will be could turn bubbling up and afternoon. however, there will be could turn particularlyp and these could turn particularly heavy midlands. heavy across the midlands. another very mild day. temperatures widely above another very mild day. temperaforas widely above another very mild day. temperafor the idely above another very mild day. temperafor the time above another very mild day. temperafor the time of ove another very mild day. temperafor the time of year, average for the time of year, with highs of 15 or 16 degrees. monday starts a little drier
11:56 am
again for most of us. a band of rain slowly pushes its way eastwards through monday morning, leaving a dry and bright most of us. bright afternoon for most of us. plenty of sunshine on offer and temperatures still remaining above average for the of above average for the time of yeah be above average for the time of year, be a changeable year, it will be a changeable rest week , with further rest of the week, with further interludes dry interludes of rain and some dry spells, temperatures spells, and those temperatures staying above average. >> looks things are heating >> looks like things are heating up. boxt boilers sponsors of weather on
11:57 am
11:58 am
11:59 am
gb news. >> good afternoon and welcome to gb news saturday, i'm pip tomson, and for the next three hours, we're having a bit of a pip hours, we're having a bit of a pip talk. >> i'll be keeping you company on tv, online and on digital radio. really looking forward to this. i'll be keeping you up to date stories that matter date on the stories that matter to so coming up this hour to you. so coming up this hour in wales, it often takes the
12:00 pm
worst times to get the best out of us. >> in adversity, you can't match us. we'll be there fighting tooth and nail for the impossible to happen for the underdog . underdog. >> vaughan gethin set to become the first next minister of wales. that is not him , but wales. that is not him, but we're talking about him very shortly. also, the man you're looking at, johnny mercer, veteran affairs minister , could veteran affairs minister, could be sent to jail over his silence, over the afghan inquiry. he's refusing to name whistleblowers who raised concerns about special forces carrying out extrajudicial killings during the afghan war. do you think johnny mercer is right in not naming the whistleblower ? pro—palestinian whistleblower? pro—palestinian protests are filling the streets of cities across the country, calling for a ceasefire in gaza. there's the first marches to go ahead since michael gove unveiled the government's new definition of extremist extremism. we're there live

16 Views

info Stream Only

Uploaded by TV Archive on