Skip to main content

tv   Headliners  GB News  June 29, 2024 5:00am-6:01am BST

5:00 am
>> good evening. it's exactly 11:00. i'm cameron walker in the gb newsroom. the prime minister says nigel farage has questions to answer. after a video emerged of a campaigner making racist comments. andrew parker was seen making a series of offensive remarks about rishi sunak. he's now apologised but insists he was goaded into making them. rishi sunak says it's part of a broader pattern of behaviour. well, tonight nigel farage has reiterated the comments have no place in his party and has
5:01 am
doubled down on his claims. the secretly recorded video is a setup. a channel 4 secretly recorded video is a setup. a channel a spokesperson says they strongly stand by what they called rigorous and duly impartial journalism, and to the us now, us president joe biden says he intends to win the election in his first public event since his struggle during the first televised debates last night. he's just been speaking in the last few hours at a rally in the last few hours at a rally in north carolina, where democrats are hoping to win the state back from the republicans this november. he claims america itself is at stake and accused former us president donald trump of repeatedly lying and said he has the morals of an alley cat after his own shaky performance dunng after his own shaky performance during the debates last night, president biden directly addressed the limits of his old age. >> i walk as easy as i used to. i don't speak as smoothly as i used to . i don't debate as well used to. i don't debate as well as i used to. well, i know what i do know . i know how to tell i do know. i know how to tell the truth . i know right from
5:02 am
the truth. i know right from wrong and i know how to do this job. i know how to get things done. job. i know how to get things done . and i know, like millions done. and i know, like millions of americans know, when you get knocked down, you get back up . knocked down, you get back up. >> but former president, us president donald trump has been speaking at a rally in virginia tonight. he reacted to joe biden's performance at last night's debate. >> he's grossly incompetent. you know, they keep saying old i know, they keep saying old i know people that are much older than him that are doing unbelievable things. it's not his age. it's his competence. he's not respected anywhere in the world. our country is being laughed at all over the world. >> police are concerned for the welfare of a man who's been missing for just over a week. 18 year old dylan duffy, from oldham, was last seen boarding a train from manchester piccadilly to london euston on the 18th of june. cctv has captured him
5:03 am
leaving the station that evening . he was last seen wearing a black tracksuit and a grey baseball cap and a backpack , and baseball cap and a backpack, and a house in los angeles , where a house in los angeles, where marilyn monroe lived and tragically died, has been saved from demolition. the couple, who bought the property, who live in a neighbouring one, plans to replace the building with an extension. the city council has now declared it a historic landmark, scuppering the extension plans, but the couple reportedly have no plans to put it up for sale and say they will appeal the decision. it was the only house ever owned by the hollywood icon. she lived there for six months until her death in 1962. well those are the latest gb news headlines for now. more on our website gb news.com. now it's time for headliners for the very latest gb news to direct your smartphone, sign up to news alerts by scanning the qr code, or go to gb news. >> .com. forward slash alerts .
5:04 am
>> .com. forward slash alerts. >> .com. forward slash alerts. >> hello and welcome to headliners. >> i'm nick dixon, taking you through tomorrow's top stories for the next hour. and i'm joined by headliners new boy adam coombes. hello there he is. looking good and old boy because like the protagonist of the martial arts movie of that name, he lives for revenge. it's louis schaefer looking very like the cheekbones. very for good an old boy. an old boy.7 yeah. have you ever seen that movie .7 did anyone ever seen that movie? did anyone get that reference? >> yeah, yeah, i've seen it. >> okay, that was a bit obscure . >> okay, that was a bit obscure. the guy that kills everyone. >> get it? >> get it? >> no, you didn't get it. but you're just like, buying. >> and we're just happy you're here, functioning, sitting still. >> my wife right there, she's telling me what to do. yeah. we always have lewis's wife telling him how. >> all right, those are. that's the banter out of the way. >> it went very smoothly. i thought, let's have a quick look at the front pages. so the daily mail has boris. britain can still swerve starmageddon. very, very boris, that one. the telegraph. biden has given one week to stand down the times badenoch voters must see through
5:05 am
farage act the mirror i could hear jay slipping on rocks. the hearjay slipping on rocks. the express rishi, my hurt and angen express rishi, my hurt and anger, daughters hearing racist slur and finally the daily star man baby beats up doddery old bloke on live tv. that's how the show is going to go tonight as well. and those are your front pages. so let's do the telegraph. i'm following a disastrous presidential debate. even joe biden's biggest supporters are admitting he should be shown the door. though to be fair, he always needs to be shown the door. louis. >> he is. he's always shown the doon >> his wife is showing him the door. he's not even the president. biden given one week to stand down. this is in the daily telegraph. who is asking him? who's giving him one week? it's not like in britain, where there's a group that can give there's a group that can give the guy one week to do something. >> it's just one guy who said he's got a week to go. yes, it's one congressman. just saying. i think the president has one week to prove he's not dead. and it's hard to know if he meant literally or metaphorically. >> the truth is, is he's like, it's like world war ii where you're looking out and you've
5:06 am
got one, you've got a bad a tank, a tank, and it's a sherman tank. >> it's not a very good tank. >> it's not a very good tank. >> and you're fighting a tiger tank, which is donald trump. and that's what they want him to do because he was on this was this has to do with the whatchamacallit last night, the presidential debate. louis. yeah the presidential debate. you had a biden moment there, which i happened to watch during the daytime because i can't watch any of these things at night—time because they stress, they stress me out. i can't watch this program. and i don't know how these people could watch the news any daylight at this hour, well, i actually stayed up and watched it because i'm so dedicated. people are always like, how do you know so much, nick? it's because i put in the extra hours staying up, watching two old men at 4 am. although trump did well, he was although trump did well, he was a little bit rambling, as trump always is. but biden was so bad. we know he's been bad lots of times. he does gaffes. he seems a bit old, but he said he was so bad. there were moments when he thought, is he going to be able to carry on? yeah. he went silent for a long time and then suddenly he said, we beat medicare, which didn't even make sense. yeah, even even as somebody who's not a fan of biden, my heart sank thinking,
5:07 am
will he actually get through this? yeah and i think it's hit a new level where everyone, even on his side, is saying he has to go. but what are they going to do? adam gavin newsom, what are they going to do? >> yeah, it's really interesting. >> i'm very conflicted on this one because obviously you see moments like that and you think he isn't fit to run. but then also, i've always been a big fan of the walking dead. so like, i personally love seeing a biden performance. >> another movie. >> another movie. >> it's another, it's another, it's a tv show. lewis but you're getting there, i don't know. >> i think this is a good sign. >> i think this is a good sign. >> the fact that people from the democratic party are even asking him to stand down. >> i think that would be better for everyone. i mean, we just need to accept that he's he's clearly not fit. >> it wouldn't be better for anybody. >> the point is. the point is he what? >> that what the debate showed, which i don't think people really kind of understood, is the difference between the two parties, the left and the right, the two sides, you know, team america, which is what donald trump stands for, and team world, which is what joe biden stands for. >> it is a total divide. it doesn't really matter who's president, because the truth is this is like they say, it's like
5:08 am
woodrow wilson's president . do woodrow wilson's president. do you even know anything about this when. no, no, no. during dunng this when. no, no, no. during during world war one. and he was he lost his mind and his wife took over. it doesn't matter because joe biden is just it's yeah, we know he's not running it. i mean, that's what that reveals. then the question becomes who's running it and what will they do next if they're worried that their candidate is so useless, what will they do? will they just. well they could lawfare i don't think they can do anything except unless they get the approval of joe biden , which approval of joe biden, which means getting the approval of and he is a he's a i met the suv- and he is a he's a i met the guy. he spoke to me personally in philadelphia. biden. yes. in 1978. was he lucid at the time? yes. he was, because i was dressed up. i was a punk rocker at the time. i know it's hard to believe the louis schaefer being a pug. that is everything about that story is hard to believe. it's weird. yeah, but he but he like , pointed me out and said, like, pointed me out and said, like, pointed me out and said, like this guy right in the front. i don't remember what i did, except then you assumed it was about you. >> it was about me. >> it was about me. >> nobody else. you're one of biden's rambling anecdotes that he still tells. and that was
5:09 am
quite rambling as well. but and they said he had a cold, which was such a brilliant get out. i mean, a cold atom can really make your dementia play up. >> i hear. >> i hear. >> oh, yeah, for sure, i think, i think, i think biden's always got a cold. if you look at him, he's got he's got a host of, sort of conditions. i mean, i think it does, it does it does affect dementia doesn't it. having, having the cold, having man flu and the amazing thing about the dude is he's got extremely low cholesterol because he's on a how would you know that. >> because according to his you google that's the least 19 to 22 and 2022 2023 medical report. they print this stuff. we've got to move on just to bring it back to move on just to bring it back to cholesterol. what is on the daily mail? >> adam, the daily mail, boris, bofis >> adam, the daily mail, boris, boris britain can still swerve. starmageddon. this is and he's saying boris johnson has said the nation doesn't really want sir keir on his tax hiking, eu loving soft on illegal migration agenda. there's still time for us to swerve the cliff edge of armageddon, this is classic bofis armageddon, this is classic boris johnson, completely optimistic, saying that the tories can still win. i think
5:10 am
personally, this is it's a lost cause.if personally, this is it's a lost cause. if you take into the fact that people are quite , tired of that people are quite, tired of the tories. and we also know that reform is taking a large chunk of typical tory voters. so i don't know really where boris is saying this for, but it's classic. you can almost hear it in his own voice . in his own voice. >> there's still time for us to swerve the stormageddon , you swerve the stormageddon, you know, he's saying it because he's become completely irrelevant. >> i couldn't even read the article. boris johnson is for other reasons. that's another reason you don't have your reading glasses, he warned, though he wants to be at least read the headline. the truth is, is that is that boris johnson is irrelevant. now. i hate to say it. i mean, i enjoyed him for a while. i didn't really, you know, i didn't really understand. he's a total, absolute phoney. >> and, you know, tell us how you really feel. >> and he has no place in this world we need. >> he has no place in this world. you mean no place in this current world that we're in? >> a current world, current world of politics. you know that sounded a bit like david tennant. no, let's be very clear about that. >> i mean, he's got a legal
5:11 am
reason. >> he's got totally ridden with type 2 diabetes. >> i hear his cholesterol is flawed, but yeah, it was. >> it's a classic, boris, as you say. >> lots of funny phrases. he even says that he says starmer's hatred of private enterprise rises off him like a vapour. he's saying that starmer's tax policies are not what people want. he doesn't have the charisma, he doesn't have the policies either. and he's saying, why are you voting for this guy? no one actually likes him and he's doubting the polls. but of course, the answer to that is, well, then what does that is, well, then what does that say about the tories? although, to be fair to boris, it must be weird for him because he was the one doing perfectly well and they got rid of him. so he's sort of taking one for the team a little bit here. but all right, maybe we'll move on and do the times and lewis the times bad knack bad. how do you pronounce this bad knock bad. knock knock. yeah, i don't like scottish people. right, that's the scottish name. badenoch. not sure if she's scottish. no, she's married to a scot i was making. oh, that does make us scottish, i forgot. >> okay, sorry. okay. that's no signpost. >> be careful. we've got to be on the same page. if people are going to think that i'm being prejudicial. >> always tell us when you're attempting to do a joke, lewis. >> okay. sorry, voters must see through farage's act. so on one hand and one hand, they got bofis hand and one hand, they got boris johnson fighting to keep
5:12 am
people, voting for the tories away from labour. and the other hand, we got people saying , hey, hand, we got people saying, hey, don't pay any attention to farage. farage is not is not, is not good for the tory party yeah. and i think for i think what's happening now is they were proper scared to death of farage and they realised that that's where the problem is going to come from. and, yeah. and rightly so. because, because we're in a war right now. i've, i've said this, remember i said this two years ago, the war we're in, i kept on saying we're in a war. nobody listened to me because we're in a war between the left and the right. it's not about individual different issues. it's about the core belief system. are you with us or are you against us? okay, just to return to some of the facts of the story in case anyone lost lewis, the cm is saying that nigel farage is only in politics for the limelight and the pursuit of celebrity . and the pursuit of celebrity. and, and she also says that, many reform voters, including some of her friends, are good people, good people. but they don't realise what they're voting for and that he's like
5:13 am
the wolf in the three little pigs. the wolf is coming to destroy you. he's not coming for a cup of tea. >> yeah. >> yeah. >> strong. yes. fairy tale based words. adam. what do you think? >> yeah, i mean, i think there's. i mean, wait, maybe there's. i mean, wait, maybe there's an element of truth to this, but i don't think i think it's unfair to say he's in it purely for himself. >> i think this is typically something we tend to say for any charismatic leader of any party. anyone who's got an ounce of sort of , anyone who's got an ounce of sort of, enthusiasm, we sort of brand them as self—obsessed. >> it's a good point. >> it's a good point. >> i, you know, you don't have to be boring. he's just he's different. he's he's fun. and i think she i think it's important to say that she seems to condemn him after this, recent, racism row, which i think we're covering later on. >> yeah, yeah, but the truth is, the truth is it is true. he's a politician publicly because he wants the attention. we're on tv because we want the attention. you can't fake it. >> you certainly do. yeah. >> you certainly do. yeah. >> okay , i certainly do, as do >> okay, i certainly do, as do i. a little bit of attention. but the other thing is this. it can take it or leave it. that is that farage and the reform party people are trying to take over the tory party. they are trying
5:14 am
to . but that's not really a to. but that's not really a secret at this point. i think that's i think that's she she said it was, she said yes, i resent you saying our former colleague is just out for attention. i think he's out for the british people. but anyway, thatis the british people. but anyway, that is the front page. and he's okay. >> but coming up, has reform uk the victim of a sting
5:15 am
5:16 am
5:17 am
>> really? but she says. welcome back to headliners. >> i'm nick dixon, still here with adam coombs and louis schaffer, who haven't learned to not speak during that bit. let's do the mail. >> and nigel farage claims the racist reform volunteer was an actor. but that would imply the media are somehow out to get reform uk. adam i don't believe it. >> yeah, i think this is this is, the story is unrwa undefined. nigel farage claims reform volunteer was, filmed by channel 4 calling rishi sunak and effing p word was an actor supporter suggests he was paid undermine him as a party's campaign descend into chaos so i
5:18 am
think the first thing to say is whether this guy is an actor or not. it's a horrible thing that he said really nasty. you know, i would just say that louis is laughing, he says all the time. >> but yeah, louis is laughing at something else in his head . at something else in his head. he doesn't know where he is. he goes, because i'm an actor. i was in all these films. >> i don't believe you've ever been paid to act for anything, louis. i think it's still on film. >> they took. >> they took. >> well, when i read the story, though, i thought it was interesting because when he said when farage said, oh, this guy seems like an actor, i said, is he though? and then i saw on twitter he had like a lot of receipts, mainly including this guy had actually been paid for acting work. he's got his like manly profile up there . there's manly profile up there. there's lots of videos him on tiktok doing different impressions of different voices . so it turns different voices. so it turns out this guy actually is a part time actor, not a very good one. but yeah, it's interesting, isn't it? >> he fooled the media of the uk. if true. >> yeah, well, it just goes to say something about journalism and journalistic integrity. no one seems to be checking things, does this is he . was he paid. is does this is he. was he paid. is he employed by reform? no. so it's just a volunteer. it doesn't really matter . you know, doesn't really matter. you know, the tories. >> your feeling? i've got to be
5:19 am
nicer to you. >> know, you don't have to be nicer to me. you can. you can try it. i think you're always going to get idiots who are drawn to these things. and i think, you know, farage is sort of brushing it off and saying he doesn't represent us. so good for him. >> what's suspicious to me? >> what's suspicious to me? >> and i'm not saying channel 4 had any involvement and they put out a statement. they say we strongly stand by our rigorous and julian, partial journalism, which speaks for itself. we met mr parker for the first time, reform uk party headquarters, where he was a reform party canvasser. >> we did not pay the reform uk canvasser or anyone else in the report. >> mr parker was not known to channel 4 news and was filmed covertly via the undercover operation, so hopefully that legally covers us. but because but in general, the reason i'm suspicious of this guy is no one's talking about getting him sacked from his job, and he's not coming out with a shameful apology. it's all the focus is on reform . and just whether he on reform. and just whether he was an actor isn't that suspicious in itself. no one's saying , well, he should lose his saying, well, he should lose his other job as a property otherjob as a property developer or whatever. it seems to me very, very dodgy. wait, this this actor shouldn't lose. you think about it. if this was a normal situation where the guys come out and said something racist, what happens to someone like that? they lose their job. they get yes, the party gets attacked, but they get attacked. they have to do a tearful
5:20 am
apology. yeah, they get calls to lose their job. none of that's happening. it's all the focus is on reform. they don't. because i know exactly what you mean. yeah, they don't have. i think what it is the mainstream media as my beautiful son number four over here says , says that, that over here says, says that, that i think what they want to just do is damage reform. they don't need an apology from reform yet because reform isn't a real thing. and if reform goes down, they won't need an apology from reform. they're trying to crush reform. they're trying to crush reform. but i'm saying from the guy, it feels a little bit ray epps to me. and jan six, this is my interpretation . the fact that my interpretation. the fact that the guy i don't know, something's not adding up for me, but who knows? >> who knows? >> who knows? >> anyway, what is the what is the thing means effing whoa, whoa whoa whoa whoa. >> this is a daytime show. >> this is a daytime show. >> well, it says f with some space in there. were you trying to trick us into saying it on air? it's. i wasn't jul louis. it's a nasty racial slur. >> we'll tell you off air, but it's not my. >> oh, i see, sorry, i didn't see what that meant. >> i know you don't have it in america. >> it's a racial slur, but. and that's why rishi sunak is very upset. but the question is, is
5:21 am
it genuine? is it an attack on reform? we don't know. i mean, and here's another question for you. >> will it affect reform's vote? >> will it affect reform's vote? >> i say possibly not even though the comments are awful. there's now this doubt around this guy's background. but also if you look at trump, for example , 2016, the locker room example, 2016, the locker room talk, so—called of the billy bush weekend, when you listen to the comments he'd said on the leaked audio and everyone said, well, trump can't carry on. but steve bannon was known for saying at the time there was 100% metaphysical certitude that he'd still win, which is a very bannon phrase, because the american people were concerned about their jobs, immigration and things like this, and they didn't really care about this, maybe a few suburban moms. >> but then the working men didn't care. >> that's a good point. and i think from my point of view is that people are so ticked off with the tory party, they'd be happy to have the tories insulted in any way. i didn't even know what that word meant, so i wasn't doing it. i apologise if i whatever. >> prince harry said it a few times, allegedly, but it's like people are so mad at the tories , people are so mad at the tories, you know. >> yeah. let the nation finish that sentence in their minds and we'll do the eye now. and will the bbc give labour an easy time
5:22 am
or continue their record of flawless impartiality? louis oh yes. this is this is bbc to lovebomb labour if it wins election amid fears over licence fee review. and this is in the. this is in our news and this is basically saying hey the tories the tories are really assuming labouris the tories are really assuming labour is really worried about the bbc is really worried about losing its the money that it gets. right. so they're going to be really nice to labour because they've been really you know, they've been really you know, they don't want to they, they don't want to. that sounds ideal >> the state broadcasters should be really nice to the government. >> yeah. can't see any problems. the truth is there are two peas in a pod. the bbc, which you know, is the british, whatever it is, they're the propaganda network. they are team world. team world. totally. take a drink, ladies and gentlemen. they're completely up the kazoo. can i say the kazoo ? no one can i say the kazoo? no one knows. i don't know what it. we don't know what it means. no, no. kwasi but also, i love when he said two peas in a pod. it was the most new york thing. that's the best thing. that's the only good thing you've said
5:23 am
tonight. but it was not an engush tonight. but it was not an english phrase. it is. but you made it so american is what i like. adam, bbc well, they love bomb labour. oh, so this is a lie. that's what i'm asking. adam, are you still speaking? yeah. can't be right. no, i think they absolutely will. >> i think i think we all know that they've they've they've basically suffered a lot under under the tory rule. i think the labour's going to be a lot more sort of a lot nicer to the bbc. i think though this, i think it is it does even though if labour when, if or i think it looks like we're safe to say labour will get in, they're not going to have a free ride or an easy ride. i think the licence fee is still going to get reviewed. that's something that still needs to be done. everyone knows it's archaic in its current model and it needs to be it needs to be reformed, so it doesn't need to be reformed. >> it needs to be completely cut out. we need i don't want to i don't we need to stop paying for the bbc. >> you that that already happens, though . happens, though. >> but you don't need to pay for the bbc. just don't watch it. >> yeah, exactly, exactly. but then you don't need to pay for it. >> how many people are there? thousand people put in prison for this? the 1000 women mostly. i, i personally like elements of
5:24 am
the bbc. >> i don't like it as a whole, but i think there's elements of it that are. >> so then you pay for it. >> so then you pay for it. >> but i do pay for it, for it. >> but i do pay for it, for it. >> but i do pay for it, for it. >> but who's forcing you to pay for it? >> you pay for lewis's. they are forcing me because if i want to watch and get pensioner's discount, you can get it in black and white for £40 a year. >> and there is you will get your black and white tv. >> you say that i look young. who said i looked young? >> i never said that. >> i never said that. >> okay, we dealt with that one. by >> okay, we dealt with that one. by the way, andrew marr was saying it will only be a short lived thing before usual hostilities are resumed. so let's see what's usual happen. i agree between the government and whoever and the bbc and whatever the current government is, but let's do the eye again. and apparently another reform candidate has said a thing. adam. >> yeah. so this is a really interesting one. a reform candidate says women shouldn't behave like men. and at first i thought, why on earth does that mean, you know, like, women shouldn't pee standing up at the urinals like they don't? but then it says promiscuity isn't attractive. now, people are coming in for saying this is misogynistic. i think, who thinks promiscuity is attractive at all in men and in women? i think a big point, point made, lewis, is not attractive. i think nobody likes to seem desperate.
5:25 am
>> i think i think it could, by the way, lewis raise his hand off camera, which is great for radio listeners. it's great. and for tv listeners, it's great because none of them, no one saw it or heard it or even i saw it. me and adam, the only people that witnessed that, it was like it was like a if something happensin it was like a if something happens in the woods, if a tree, if lewis puts his hand up in the woods, does anyone care? promiscuity is really attractive when it's directed at you. just come across very desperate, lewis. >> i don't think so. >> i don't think so. >> it is attractive and the truth is, this is just one more piece. this is an i news. one more thing about let's cry. try to crush, reform. reform. yeah, it did feel a bit like that to me. i watched the interview as a young lady interviewing this guy james gunn. it seemed like a perfectly nice, slightly posh, eccentric guy with a hat. >> yeah, a sort of colourful, not colourful black, but it was colourful in eccentricity and he seemed like a nice enough guy to me. >> and when asked about andrew tate, he said he's not my role model. he didn't know much about him, so that was just doesn't know who tate is. he just said that as a christian, he doesn't think promiscuity is very good. that's the most sensible, normal thing. it's a scandal. yeah. i mean yeah, absolutely. >> if that's a scandal, we are
5:26 am
completely lost as a country . completely lost as a country. what is bad about that? >> well, what it is, i tell you what's bad about it is because it steps on self—identity and the right of people to do whatever they want to do. it's saying, i don't like what you're doing. yeah, people don't like being told no, they don't like want to be told what to do. yes, it steps on the liberal orthodoxy, especially now, you know, you've got women who women who've been promiscuous, promiscuous, which a second ago you said you liked. i could, like, change his mind. that was. that was minutes ago. >> very quick. you've learned in a different world. >> we live in a very different world to 1.5 minutes ago. >> let's do the express them with a story about the lack of support for veterans . support for veterans. >> serious one this one news mental health horror. this is in the express . mental health the express. mental health horror for veterans is half of those suffering are not being supported. so this is one of those stories. yeah, they're not supporting the veterans. but the truth is this is this is a group of people from i'm not even going to mention what it is. it's people who are selling drugs. they're pot people. this is the pot. the pot i don't i read the story and i don't even know what you're talking about. no, i'm going to tell you what
5:27 am
it is you said. you're not going to mention anything of the story, which is quite unconventional. i am going to mention it. it's a it's a group who is selling medicinal cannabis, okay. they want people to take pot to make whatever you call it. this sounds like the lib dems . yeah. to take it very similar. >> just just to put you back in there though, just to put you back in you there. i think in the article even it says 60% of these people express a preference to avoid prescription medication. so it doesn't have to be drugs. it can just be therapy or talking with people down the pub , like getting down the pub, like getting people actually together. it doesn't have to be that. it doesn't have to be that. it doesn't have to be. >> but this is what they're promoting. they're promoting drug use, which is what all these newspapers do. it's about drug use. but wait one second. yes. is that this is a they asked a thousand people who had left the service. how long ago did they leave the service? a long time ago yesterday. people who leave their jobs tend not to be doing well. they're not people who spent their entire career. we should be supporting our veterans, though. >> we should be putting them at the highest. well, that's what they're trying to do. >> this isn't this is completely if it was if it was 1000 former marketers, i we wouldn't care. >> but if it's veterans, you know, they fought for the
5:28 am
country. >> what about what about a thousand people who've been fired from gb news? they're not going to have a again, not not as important as veterans, as much as that pains me to say. >> look at lose his face. he was weighing that one up. louis schaefer versus veterans. >> who's more important? it's more it is more important. well, ihope more it is more important. well, i hope the veterans get the help they need. >> that's all i'm going to say. >> that's all i'm going to say. >> that's all i'm going to say. >> that is it for part two. but coming up, jk rowling versus david tennant. >> why you shouldn't give toddlers
5:29 am
5:30 am
5:31 am
soon. >> welcome back to headliners. >> welcome back to headliners. >> let's get cracking with the telegraph. >> and the lib dems want to legalise cannabis but banned tobacco. so if you're ever smoking a doobie with ed davey, just be aware. it might be pretty strong. adam. >> yeah? this is so. pretty strong. adam. >> yeah? this is so . this is a >> yeah? this is so. this is a story from the telegraph. lib dems vowed to legalise cannabis but banned tobacco, which sounds kind of crazy, doesn't it ? in an kind of crazy, doesn't it? in an upside down world, when i when i first read this, the i remembered, like being i was
5:32 am
almost transported back to when i was a teenager thinking that that would be really cool to legalise cannabis, but it's kind of like it's kind of a bit embarrassing now because, you know, 17 i would have loved this idea, but like, i'm 32 now. i want to hear, you know, things about how are you going to help me out with my mortgage? i think this is the lib dems trying to, like, appeal to a younger audience, younger voters. and it's almost like, oh, and if you vote for us, you know, you can stay up late and eat ice cream for breakfast. and it's like it's kind of embarrassing that these are these are their rules and they're still polling as badly as they are. >> i think you're making a mistake. you're trying to figure out what the lib dems are thinking. and i think that's, you know, i've been here for 25 years. i don't know what they're thinking. no one knows what they're thinking. they don't know what they're i think they want to they thinking to legalise cannabis. yeah. they may be thinking nothing. >> there's always that chance. yeah. to be very fair. ed davey said this i think to you, christopher hope on gb news. >> it was quite interesting. he his point was he's a very against smoking because i'm going to defend the lib dems here because his parents died of cancer even though it wasn't from smoking. >> you know, he's seen people go through things like that. >> but he doesn't. he doesn't want cannabis to be banned because of its medicinal qualities. but he does want the
5:33 am
really strong stuff. the skunk to be banned. so he's kind of threading this position. it's not my position. >> i'm against all drug legalisation, but i think that's the idea. >> yeah. well, i think when you legalise something like pot or any kind of drugs, it just takes the fun out of it. and that's not yeah, that's not, you know, and then it just turns ugly like alcohol though. the people have told me how good alcohol is and idnnk told me how good alcohol is and i drink alcohol sometimes . but i drink alcohol sometimes. but so you don't just need to rely on that word almost. i don't think it's that just that doesn't do anything. it does something for me. but it's not that i don't sit there and go, oh, i got to have a drink. but the truth is it's from the lib dems. i mean, i don't i met a lot of lib dems where i live down there in southwark. they're lovely people, but i don't know, you know what it is somebody you got right now. >> i used to live in a lib dem stronghold back in the day. yeah, yeah. but i don't know. i think it's interesting. it's like also smoking weed. it is bad for you. like breathing in carb. anything. you're breathing in carbon monoxide. let's not pretend it's. it's fine. like, you know, and i think you know, it . it. >> it's just not as bad. >> it's just not as bad. >> it's just not as bad. >> it's not as bad as as as. but it's such a low bar for cigarettes, isn't it? and i think, like, if you legalise
5:34 am
this, it's got to, it's got to open the floodgates. people are going to be, smoking whilst driving and it's, it's going to be, it's going to. yeah, we know alcohol's bad already, so it's hard to imagine how london could smell any more of cannabis than it already does . it already does. >> but yeah, we don't do moderation. >> i'm against all drug usage, so i just want to say that for the record, don't do it, kids. >> but let's move on and do the telegraph. >> and should politicians be named and shamed for having, some would say, bonkers views on the trans issue? louis. yes, well, that's what's happening right now. this is in the telegraph, which is weird that this kind of thing is in here. election candidates who hold militant, quote unquote , militant, quote unquote, militant, quote unquote, militant views on the trans rights named and shamed by women's group. and that women's group is called what is a woman, which is similar to that, that what is a woman in america. and what is a woman in america. and what they're doing is they're collecting a list of all 600 and something candidates who are on that 600 more than that, because it's many candidates per congressional district or mp district, whatever it's called biden moment who say anything vaguely not following the we
5:35 am
love trans. trans is good self—identify. everything's cool about the trans issue, including saying if you ask what is a woman? you could be on a list saying you're transphobic. did you know this? if you say, if you know this? if you say, if you go , if you go something you go, if you go something like, like that, it's a woman . like, like that, it's a woman. >> this is a debate. this is a lot like last night's debate. >> many people are looking at lewis going, has he got long left hand? >> he carry on his own side of questioning. >> can lewis schaffer carry on a few of the more back? i forget what is it even fair, even fair to have him on the tv? >> i thought i made a view, but it's this. >> did you make a view? i had view. >> i had a view. you've eaten too many carbs today, lewis. >> i've seen you eating carbs. >> i've seen you eating carbs. >> i've seen you eating carbs. >> i know i've been eating and it's made you crash. oh my god, look at how i look at how fat i've. yeah. i'm just. you're crashing. lewis. >> you're rebounding. >> you're rebounding. >> adam, can you make any sense of this story? yeah. >> no, i think it's interesting. i think it's important, isn't it, to sort of like, have these grassroots campaigns. i think certain women are sort of are standing up for their identity, i think there's a which side are
5:36 am
they standing up for? well, they're standing on the sides of. they'd be called terfs, wouldn't they? that's what these women are, because they're standing up for the women. i've never personally seen the problem with saying like, what's the difference between saying there's someone who's a woman and someone who's a trans woman? they're two different things. i think that's the that's the ideology. you should be able to say there's two different things. i think where people get lost is by saying, you can't say trans woman, that needs to be women. and that's that's where you lose a lot of people. i think most people are quite polite and say, you're happy to call someone a trans woman, but let's not pretend they're the same thing. >> if you were running for office, which i would never do, you would go on a list you'd be on. yeah, yeah. i mean, and it's true, there's a lib dem candidate here saying transgender men and men and transgender men and men and transgender women and women, and they're so they've so lost the plot because interestingly, starmer and blair, blair and they're there for starmer because he copies blair have said, no, no, no, we're being normal again. a woman's a woman, a man's a man. but the memo hasn't reached much of the left. >> but in defence of the lib dem candidate, when they did say that they were actually high at the time. oh, they were smoking a lot of cannabis. >> yeah, yeah. >> yeah, yeah. >> and that that will be
5:37 am
problem. >> so let's do the telegraph. and jk rowling has weighed into the david tennant versus kemi badenoch row. adam. >> yeah . so, this is the story >> yeah. so, this is the story from by the telegraph. jk rowling criticises david tennant for allegedly calling feminists little whining f words. what is that word? >> what is that you want to ask me what that word means? >> no, it's a bad word, louis. i wasn't trying to bring it out in anyway. >> that's fine. >> that's fine. >> listen, this is interesting, jk rowling is obviously sort of launched into the defence, and sort of attacking david tennant and david tennant obviously being in the news recently for attacking kemi badenoch, asking her, wishing that she wouldn't exist anymore, which is obviously very horrible. i think it's quite saddening to sort of see what's happening with david tennant, because i used to be a very big fan of him when he was just an actor, rather than just you know, annoying. yeah. weird activist. like, did you google him too? no, i knew who david. i watched i watched doctor who. that was a joke. was it? okay, you have to signpost us. tell us when you're doing the joke. >> sign that says joke. >> sign that says joke. >> i think david tennant is kind of proven in the last few weeks that the doctor who might have two hearts but only has half a
5:38 am
brain. nice. yeah. >> did you write that and think about that a lot ahead of time? >> a lot ahead of time. yeah. and it was worth it. >> it was good. >> it was good. >> people will love that. >> people will love that. >> thank you, ken, can i say i didn't understand it because, i don't know, i thought it was funny to, to quote alan partridge, a few more of those a week and you're away, but but the thing that really bothers me about this story is that, well, many things do everything that tennant said, and he allegedly said this extra thing behind the scenes. so he's apparently saying even worse. oh, actually, it was probably not even quite as bad as the public stuff. >> but he says in his speech, he doesn't understand why i'm a little depressed by the fact that enlarging that everyone has the right to be who they want to be and live how they want to live as long as they're not hurting anyone else, should merit any kind of special award. >> the key is that they are hurting other people because obviously there's a clash of rights. >> if you if women are concerned about people going into their prisons and changing rooms and sports, obviously you are hurting other people. so just to pretend that part of the debate is not there , it's just so is not there, it's just so disingenuous. right. and that's a that's a great point, is that if you say, i'm a woman and people believe you're a woman and you go into a bathroom and
5:39 am
people don't think you're a woman, there's going to be a problem there. so somebody's rights are taken away. i mean , rights are taken away. i mean, it's this whole thing. i think people are going to look back on this time as like they were fighting over this . and fighting over this. and meanwhile, the there are people who are trying to bring down, like, i was walking down the street today and i'm noticing how many arms you could see on on women, how many arms the skin, the skin on the woman's arm. >> wow . i don't know what that means. >> i don't know what that means. you mean they're not the taliban? >> no, we're not the taliban. we allow women to work. and we. the agreement . agreement. >> okay, i don't know what you stand on that, louis, but that was that was fun. >> the agreement we have amongst ourselves, even though i might say i'm an anti—trans, let's say, which i'm not, but let's just say it's still so much closer than our enemies. >> you're stuck on shuffle us and stop us from drinking. >> oh, i see, okay. yes, we should be coming together over our similarities coming together rather than fighting over this trans issue. let people call it. i got it in the end. all right, let's do the times and toddlers giving phones to calm them down
5:40 am
and have anger issues later in life. >> is this what happened to you, louis? >> it could be. yeah. i don't think i was paid attention to it as a child. my mother was was not the great. she was a good mother in some ways, but very bad. obviously bad. >> let's do an hour on that. >> let's do an hour on that. >> yeah, well, we could, because that's why i am the way i am. that's why i'm such a, you know, i wear a hi vis jacket around the house because i want the attention. >> i believe that i believe that is your first joke that you haven't. >> we've got. >> we've got. >> but i've made that before. if anybody. oh, really? anybody google me at louis shaffer .co.uk at louis shaffer and see what you like. anyway, the point is, is that they did it. there's been a study done. it was done out of, out of, you know, i don't know where it was done in budapest, at the university, you know, like ridiculously bad places. quebec, quebec, and one in quebec. that said, if mothers who give phones to their kids to calm them down in public places have bad, have worse behaved children a year later, okay. and they is it the phone that they've given because it's
5:41 am
called digital emotional regulation? is it the phone that they're giving out or were they just bad parents? yeah. >> that's so digital emotional regulation. so duh. >> yeah. yeah. >> yeah. yeah. >> which is kind of what the kids end up doing if you stick them too much in front of the tv, that's the noise they make. >> go on. adam, what do you think? >> yeah, i think this is interesting, isn't it? i don't think this is any anything new, though, because when i, when i was, when i was a kid in the 90s, it was the same sort of message, but it was sort of the tv instead of the phone. it was like, don't stick your kid in front of the tv. and i think this is this is sort of common sense, is it? most people know you should sort of like, treat your kids with, respect and actually don't just give them something to shut them up. don't put a screen in front of their faces. and of course, it's no surprise if you are going to just put a screen in front of your kid. every time they make noise, they're going to end up having the emotional intelligence of an iphone when they grow up. yes, but maybe it's just that the it's not that the tv is doing it, it's that the tv is doing it, it's that the parents are bad parents and bad parents put their kids in front of the tv. >> sometimes. >> sometimes. >> if they're young parents as well, they've probably been raised on phones and tvs themselves. >> i, for one, blame the
5:42 am
parents. let's quickly do the guardian and the science of dad dancing. adam. yeah. >> so this is from the guardian. shaking it off. this, the science of dad dancing and why it's good for you. and this has been. this is a story prompted by a viral video of prince william, which prompted experts to laud the benefits of men communicating their hormones, which is a sentence which sounds very horrible, from lifting moods to boosting trust. so this is a very nice, fluffy piece. basically, dancing in any form of exercise might make you feel good, they said they did some studies. i want to know if there's a scientific study done on old men dancing differently from younger counterparts. of course , that's i don't know, why course, that's i don't know, why are the scientists spending their time doing this? like, let's, let's, let's fix cancer? >> because because it's an excuse to go dance. >> louis, you're in one of these categories. >> i dead dance when you become a dad, you old man. >> young brain , where do you sit >> young brain, where do you sit on this heap? >> old guys look horrible dancing. there's this. you know it is. if michael jackson were alive today, he'd be a horrible. >> i mean, he's very old. yeah. >> i mean, he's very old. yeah. >> i mean, he's very old. yeah. >> i mean, but you look great dancing, louis, because you're. you're very young at heart.
5:43 am
>> yeah, because of your all meat diet? >> no, the all meat diet. >> no, the all meat diet. >> i'm just. i'm able to dance. stay away from the dance floor because i'm smell quite bad. >> can't. can't speak, but great dancen >> that is it for part three. so sorry. we're coming up on the final section. >> a bizarre new internet trend involving flights, the songs that sum up the election campaign. and should you weigh your child before letting them ride donkey? >> the big
5:44 am
5:45 am
5:46 am
soon. welcome back to the final section of headliners and before we get into the very hectic last bit, i just want to say thank you very much to richard bellis, our producer. it's his last day . our producer. it's his last day. he's been a soldier on headliners for two and a half years. and there we go. round of applause for richard. he's a joy to work with. unlike certain people we could talk about. he's, he's a hard worker and he's a smart cookie. so thank you to richard. and we wish him the best of luck in whatever he doesin the best of luck in whatever he does in the future. but the news moves on, so we have to move on and get on with it. the news
5:47 am
never sleeps. so let's do the guardian. and which songs sum up the election campaign? for me, it has to be the classic ballad. you ignored your base for 14 years and now you're toast. lewis. >> oh, we skipped the thing. did we skip a thing? >> no, that's 1515. >> no, that's 1515. >> do you want about. sorry? heaven knows i'm sorry. that was a very. oh, yes. do you know that? what's his name? johnny marr wrote a lot of the smiths songs. did you know he wrote the guitar parts and morrissey did the lyrics? oh, okay. well, that means he wrote it. i think that's the music. i think he gets credit for that. anyway, i'm a big expert on oasis now, okay? heaven knows i'm miserable. the smiths . miserable. the smiths. >> yeah. all right. i saw what you did. >> heaven knows i'm miserable now we know the uk radio listeners nominate songs to sum up the election campaign, and this is a radio station on. i guess it's. i don't know whether it's all over or something or in london. it. i'm not going to say what it is because it's giving them an ad and that's what the that's what the newspaper is at this level. it's just ads that are written by these surveys . are written by these surveys. they run, they do a survey and then they send it in and they say, this is the thing, and this is a news thing, and this is
5:48 am
what the guardian decides to put. but this radio station has a lot of older viewers. so they ask people, what do you watch him do? i listen, listen to it. >> you said viewers, so you tncked >> you said viewers, so you tricked me. >> but i'm sorry. so i said i didn't trick you. it was a mistake. listen, no, i never i've never heard it. i like the idea of it and the songs that they mention are good. >> hello, darkness, my old friend was how i feel now. but that was. that was one that could be used for the sound of silence for the campaign. yeah. what do you think, adam. anything. >> yeah. >> yeah. >> i mean i'm going to say i'm going to name the radio station just to annoy lewis, it's called boom radio. >> why would you do that. >> why would you do that. >> just, just to annoy you. but yeahi >> just, just to annoy you. but yeah i mean the clue is in the name boom radio. it's specifically tailored for baby boomers. >> so i've heard of this station. >> no, but you can you can sort of i mean, i don't listen, i have it's where the good bbc presenters go and they get rid of them for no reason. right. boom. radio. >> well, i'm rid of him for reason. >> they're old. and they also found reason. i'm under. i mean, tonight i'm rethinking. >> but generally i don't think being old a hindrance except for biden. and maybe schaefer. >> no, it is. it is a hindrance because you've got a young person who's 32 years old. he's
5:49 am
not young ish ish. >> but yeah , young people don't >> but yeah, young people don't tend don't tend not to listen to the radio anyway. 34 221 said, why did you say ish? no, because i just said 32 is not young, but yeah. no, i think he's just saying move on. >> just so you know, it's his last day. he doesn't even care, but he's just watched that bickering and gone, literally. let's move on. yeah. i've broken a non—story, to be honest. >> it's that ridiculous. >> it's that ridiculous. >> all right. >> all right. >> so how old am i, really? let's move. >> let's move aside. your own songs that you think the election campaign should go with. but let's do the daily star and a new trend has taken the internet by storm. and it's actually just men on flights staring straight ahead at him. >> yes , absolutely. now. so i'm >> yes, absolutely. now. so i'm going to change the title of this because it's a bit got a bit of a naughty word in there, but it's in the in—flight something dogging takes the put it on the screen. >> anyway, after we just said we can't do it. okay, we all agreed we can't say it, but they put it on. >> on. >> yeah. so i mean in—flight bulldogging takes radio storm, but it's probably not what you think it is. so but yeah, this is basically people just sitting young , people sitting on planes, young, people sitting on planes, not listening to podcasts, no screen time, just staring
5:50 am
forward. and they're calling this, raw dogging up flight. >> no, they're doing it deliberately, but this just used to be sitting with your thoughts. >> i don't know why. >> i don't know why. >> life till about 1997. >> life till about 1997. >> yeah. >> yeah. >> i don't know why we're having to put a fancy thing in there. sometimes it's quite good not to be constantly plugged in and just do it. let your brain decompress. i think there's different levels, aren't the video i saw there was different levels. >> so there's the first level. so you don't go on your phone. yes. then it's one where you don't even listen to music. on don't even listen to music. oh yeah. you just look at the map of what the flight is doing that the provided map. yeah. there's a new version where you don't even look at the map. you just look into white space and men, because men can make a competition out of anything. yeah. they're like, well, watch me. i'm just going to look at blankness and i'm going to think nothing for 17 hours. yeah. so it's a new trend, lewis. >> well, do you remember when i first moved here? because i've been here for 24 something years. >> and you remember the wright brothers don't you? people? >> lewis? those planes you had to, like, run the first bit yourself with your feet. >> the flintstone planes. >> the flintstone planes. >> i came over here on one of those. anyway we'll discuss it another time. but the point is, is that the. you confuse me, and
5:51 am
now i've turned it easily. >> beau biden moments. >> beau biden moments. >> is that. is that, well, what was the question? oh, are you doing a biden tribute like a long joke tonight? there's maybe, like, i forgot what i was talking about. you interrupted me. i was talking about this story with the it's fine . well, story with the it's fine. well, i'll tell you. just say it. >> you come back to you later, lewis, i do want to say this, but this is what people used to do. >> they used. on they used to go to a pub and they just used to sit there with a with a glass of pint of beer. right. and just look at the beer bubbles if they look at the beer bubbles if they look even looked at that. >> well, some people had friends. lewis as well. >> no, no, they were all alone. they didn't have even a newspaper to look at. okay, fine. >> we're going to move on to this fairly boring story in the metro. could lego be the key to space exploration? lewis? >> yeah, well, this is how lego style moon bricks could help build space bases in the future. and this is this. this comes out of the esa, which is the european space agency, which says that thinking about the moon and making bricks on the moon and making bricks on the moon , how are they going to make moon, how are they going to make bncks moon, how are they going to make bricks on the moon? lego they're going to make bricks that look kind of look like lego,
5:52 am
possibly. but they're going to make it out of the space dust. but there's a problem because they don't have space dust in on this planet. so we're on. so they got to they can't practice. they can't practice. and number two, no one gives a damn about, okay, european space, i want to do this. >> adam or donkey. >> adam or donkey. >> yeah, yeah, i'd love to. >> okay, let's do, let's do the donkey one. okay. >> let's do the express then with the key question. is it to okay weigh a child before he rides a donkey? adam. >> yes. 100% sure. short story. absolutely. it's for the donkey's health. i bet when i first read the story, i thought it was hilarious. people were getting upset. like parents of, like, maybe overweight children or larger children saying, this isn't fair. i think if you are too heavy for the donkey, you you can't go on. they're the same thing with rollercoasters and height. i think the businessmen of this , of the of businessmen of this, of the of the donkeys missed an opportunity to upsell the larger children to horses . i opportunity to upsell the larger children to horses. i think if you weigh too much, pay an extra £20, get on a horse and that's it. it's good news. >> and there's bad news. >> and there's bad news. >> good news? too fat for a donkey. >> but have you ever tried horses, louis? in about five seconds. anything on donkeys? >> yes. anything on donkeys?
5:53 am
i've been to skegness and they've got. they've got. i think they've got walruses in skegness and or a goat. they've got a museum right on the beach at skegness. it's a great place. >> you rode a goat. >> you rode a goat. >> okay. >> okay. >> that wasn't five seconds and it didn't make sense. but the show is pretty much over. so let's take another quick look at saturday's front pages. it's been a good one. let's let's start with the daily mail. it's boris. britain can still swerve starmageddon the telegraph has biden has given one week to stand down. the times badenoch voters must see through farage act. the mirror i could hearjay slipping on rocks. the express rishi, my hurt and anger at daughters hearing racist slur and finally the daily star manbaby beats up doddery old bloke live on tv, which is what happened tonight. and those were your front pages. that's it for tonight's show. thanks to adam and lewis headlines back at 11 pm. tomorrow. if you're p.m. tomorrow. if you're watching at 5 am, then stay tuned for breakfast. good night. >> that warm feeling inside from boxt boilers . sponsors of boxt boilers. sponsors of weather on . gb. news
5:54 am
weather on. gb. news >> time for your latest weather update from the met office here on gb news. good evening to you tomorrow a bit of a three way split with our weather bright and breezy across scotland with and breezy across scotland with a few showers. mostly fine and sunny across east anglia and the south east, but in between this weather system is creeping towards us. not a particularly potent one, but it will bring cloud and some outbreaks of rain. that's starting to move across the republic of ireland at the moment and spreading towards wales and southern parts of northern ireland by dawn. still a few showers across the far north and west of scotland. still quite breezy here as well, but elsewhere the winds pretty light with some clearer skies. temperatures will dip down to single figures, but actually turning quite cloudy, but that will keep the cloudy temperatures up across wales and northwest england through the early hours . the cloud will early hours. the cloud will increase a little bit across southwest england too. so a grey start here for some. maybe the odd shower, but for much of east anglia in the southeast, fine and sunny and for a good part of
5:55 am
scotland and northern ireland, certainly the north of northern ireland. a fine start to saturday. some decent spells of sunshine, still quite breezy across the far north and still plenty of showers packing in across caithness, sutherland, the western isles and the northern isles. they'll keep going for much of the day, but a good chunk of scotland will be dry. this cloud and rain, though likely to stick around. not much rain, i suspect getting to the east of the pennines but still predominantly cloudy here. dull and damp on some of those coasts across north—west england. north and west wales throughout. but brighter skies further south and with a bit of sunshine 25 degrees is possible across the south—east, scotland and northern ireland in the high teens, but with a bit of sunshine, it shouldn't feel too bad because the winds will be lighter tomorrow compared to today. mostly fairly light winds on sunday as well. some rain will head back towards shetland, could start quite grey in the south with 1 or 2 showers here. quite a bit of cloud on sunday, but i'm still optimistic that many places will see some sunny spells and we've lost the heat from earlier in the week. temperatures at or a touch below
5:56 am
average , a brighter outlook with average, a brighter outlook with boxt solar sponsors of weather on gb. >> news
5:57 am
5:58 am
5:59 am
6:00 am
in performance during the debate. >> well, that's as donald trump claims. biden didn't know what the hell he was doing during the exchange at a rally in virginia. >> and as president biden admits, he doesn't debate as well as he used to crowds in nonh well as he used to crowds in north carolina . north carolina. >> also today, reform uk leader nigel farage insists footage showing racist comments made by a campaigner was a set up as rishi sunak condemns the racial slurs made against him.
6:01 am
>> a new portrait of

13 Views

info Stream Only

Uploaded by TV Archive on