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tv   Headliners  GB News  July 29, 2024 2:00am-3:01am BST

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tory leadership entered the tory leadership race, saying that she can unite the party, turn it back to a winning machine. that's as james cleverly robert jenrick tom tugendhat, mel stride priti patel and now kemi badenoch are all running to replace rishi sunak. all running to replace rishi sunak . nominations close sunak. nominations close tomorrow . the met police says tomorrow. the met police says its officers were not involved in the alleged arrest of tommy robinson. protesters gathered outside of downing street and scotland yard earlier , scotland yard earlier, demonstrating after his supporters said he'd been detained under anti—terror laws. it comes after a complaint was made after a film was allegedly shown at a central london rally yesterday, in breach of a high court order. a man has been re—arrested this time on suspicion of murder after a woman died after sustaining a serious head injury in suffolk. 57 year old anita rose had been walking her dog when she was found unconscious in brantham shortly after 8 am. on wednesday. she later died in
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hospital. the 45 year old man from the ipswich area is being questioned . it's not believed questioned. it's not believed that the suspect was known to the victim , and two men in their the victim, and two men in their 20s have died after a two seater light aeroplane crashed in a field in thorganby, near selby. nonh field in thorganby, near selby. north yorkshire police received an emergency call just before ten this morning. it's thought that the victims are the pilot and his single passenger. their next of kin have been informed and investigation is now underway . okay, those are the underway. okay, those are the latest gb news headlines. for now. it's time for those headunes now. it's time for those headlines for the very latest gb news direct to your smartphone, sign up to news alerts by scanning the qr code, or go to gbnews.com forward slash alerts .
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gbnews.com forward slash alerts. >> thank you're. hello and welcome to headliners. you run through the next day's newspapers with three comedians. i'm leo kearse and tonight i'm joined by two of the finest comedians available in their price range is kerry marx. and josh howie. >> yes, definitely one of the better, cheaper comedians. >> know your mid—price. yeah. let's see it. don't sell yourself down. how you both. >> thank you. i'm good. i'm good. how are you.7 >> good. how are you? >> yeah. good. thanks. >> yeah. good. thanks. >> all right. >> all right. >> that's good. bands >> that's good. bands >> good bands. we got the. we notably we were. the problem was we were getting on so well off air that we've just we're bounced out. got we've done too much, too much already. >> we need to have safe facing rooms. >> i'm having a great time. >> i'm having a great time. >> let's have a quick look at monday's front pages. the daily mail leads with gps. we will bnng mail leads with gps. we will bring nhs to its standstill. the guardian has reeves paves way for cuts and tax rises to fix finances. the times leads with squeeze on spending to lift uk from £20 billion. black hole . from £20 billion. black hole. the daily telegraph has israel to retaliate against hezbollah.
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the financial times has. harris raises $200 million in first week of record shattering election campaign. that's kamala harris and the daily star has too hot to work. and those were front pages . and let's have a front pages. and let's have a closer look at those front pages , closer look at those front pages, starting with the times. kerry, what have they got? >> well, i'll tell you. leo. yeah, good, that's what i'm here for. yeah. and, we'll launch with. well, we'll launch with what's on the times. i think it's a good idea. just said that. why are you killing so much time? these people want stories. get to the information. i want to enjoy it. you know, >> so this is a story about, kemi badenoch. >> who's. and she's launching her leadership campaign, having got her ten backers now, and she says, i'll turn the tide of liberalism. liberalism. and then she added, and drown them all. hahaha she didn't say that, but that was in her head, you know.
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yeah >> liberalism. she really means illiberalism . because, you know. illiberalism. because, you know. well, classic liberalism is about freedom and free markets and all the rest of it. whereas she she , she is very much in she she, she is very much in favour of freedom and free speech. >> so she's trying to turn the tide to liberalism. yeah. okay. yeah from liberalism. yeah. maybe turn the wheel of liberalism. yeah. i dunno, i don't like these metaphors straight away. the trouble is all these terms get used in so many convenient ways, and they change over time until we no longer know what any of them mean. i mean, i think we know what she means. >> she means, you know, this rampant soft communist leftism that's that's encroached onto all our public institutions and all our public institutions and a lot of the private sector as well. so she's a firm believer in capitalism and a firm disbeliever in identity politics. >> you you speechwriter, you . >> you you speechwriter, you. well, no, this is the thing is, she is very much known and has a part of her sort of prominence is about , sort part of her sort of prominence is about, sort of defeating, at least in the last government, her own government. a lot of the stuff that had come through in terms of the trans debate and whatnot, what people don't really know is much else about
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her. so actually, a lot of her initial sort of speech or launching herself seems to be about saying that she's actually like super pro capitalism, and it's not a dirty word . and so it's not a dirty word. and so she i feel like she's deliberately not focusing on that stuff, the woke stuff, because that's what she's kind of known for and is now trying to be like, this is what i stand for. money. yeah she's giving a little money here. she's giving me a little mention. the, you know, she calls the nasty identity politics, but she's talking more about values, about immigration, about shrinking state, stepping out of the way of business and so on, which i think she needs to do now because there's a bit of a backlash going on anyway with some of the identity politics. and by the time of the election, it may not be the main issue. people are interested in. it might be that she needs to show herself as more prime ministerial and other subjects. so. well, yeah, she's she's harking back to margaret thatcher with his talk of, you know, free markets and unleashed a very original of her. >> yeah. it was it's very popular. why pick something? why change something? i'm looking to see how blue suits with shoulder pads to be fair. >> and disraeli and winston
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churchill, you know, she's going for all the tory greats. classic. yeah, yeah. john major, do you find it weird that that really you find it weird that capitalism has become this dirty word amongst. >> well, no . >> well, no. >> well, no. >> but i think part of the labour's policy to come back into power was they were very much courting big business. they spent the last couple of years meeting with business leaders, and they were very much trying to recreate that new labour idea of getting back and pushing, getting, which we saw. we saw a good ten years of money being made. yeah, there is another story we're going to talk about later, but i just want to about us urges restraint after attack on israeli kills 12 children. and i just want to just say we are going to talk about it in the next section. so tune around if you want to see my, me go mental, but, it's not like after 9/11, israel went, oh, you know what, guys? hey america, chill out. you know you had your civilians. so when this happens, it it drives me mad, but i'm saving it up for the next section. okay? keep my powder dry, okay, i won't i won't say anything again until then. >> i respect the cover of monday's telegraph. >> yeah . reeves, to sell off
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>> yeah. reeves, to sell off land and buildings to help fill 20 billion black hole in public finances. this is the sort of. this has just been leaked all the way through the last couple of days . so there's no surprise of days. so there's no surprise left when she actually does. finally announce this 20 billion black hole. i don't know if the surprise tomorrow is going to be that it's actually 15 billion, and we're all much better than we thought. but really, this is, labour just trying to say, oh, the tories, they messed up really bad and now we're going to have to put up your taxes. that's the gist of it. there may be truth to that, but the way that they've just gone about this is kind of a bit annoying. selling off buildings and land, that makes sense, they're also talking about doing this new office for value for money that's going to cost a couple of billion. >> i mean, do you think do you think it makes sense selling off buildings and land, or is it selling the family silver? you can only sell it once. >> yes. you can only sell it once. >> yeah, like our bronze. i agree with josh that it's a bit annoying. every new government comes in and does the same thing, don't they ? they always
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thing, don't they? they always say we've discovered a black hole in the finance. we can't keep any of our election promises. it's not our fault. >> we had access to all the financial information. >> that's what i don't get. it is all there, isn't it? everyone's had a look at the books. what are they discovering after they get in? because surely that i mean, that should almost be a crime. it should be. you've had a look at the books. you've had a look at the books. you know what? you know what's in there. they do, don't they? yeah. no, i don't think they do. they do is open to them. right. it's not it's not like there's parts of it that are kept secret until you get in. am i right about that? no, no, i think that there's ways of, you know, you push this payment onto this thing, you say, we're going to pay thing, you say, we're going to pay for this hostel with this budget, and it really does take time to sort it all out. and coming in. government should know what's in the books that they're going to be dealing with. yeah. well no, no, they should make election promises. >> they do as opposition ministers. they've got access to, to all the information. but they still every, every government does this. >> so what is she even claiming that she didn't know then. she didn't know that was 20 billion missing. >> i think they're just saying they're saying like just a bit more look properly. it's a better way to say we're putting up your taxes and saying, listen, we're even more communist and socialist than the last lot, so give us more money because we've got even more
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welfare to dole out to by bright people to vote for us. >> i mean, this is i can't read the print here, but there's something on the nhs. are they selling off nhs parts as well? is that, yeah. i mean, there's also going well against there's going to be their talk was so unused buildings. yeah. because yeah that's the great thing with the collapse of the nhs, so much of it isn't getting used. yeah. >> there's a, there's an upside to the dilapidation of our country. moving on, kerry , country. moving on, kerry, what's on the front cover of the financial times, >> this is that, kamala harris is raising she's raised 200 million in the first week of, which is a record shattering amount, it's broken records. it's that kind of record shattering. yeah. shattered him . shattering. yeah. shattered him. absolutely shattered them. shattered more records than than, you know, than records revealed. basically the democrats or people, democratic , democrats or people, democratic, people who put money in are really excited . they've actually really excited. they've actually got a candidate now. so they're all throwing money at it. and they had a candidate kind of
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candidate who's an actual conscious, a conscious, and they've got a candidate. they've got someone who can talk. we've got someone who can talk. we've got who can get through sentence. >> we've had a palace coups, we've got an unelected candidate. yes, that nobody asked for . candidate. yes, that nobody asked for. look, this is early days. >> we'll see what happens when she starts speaking a bit more and saying what she's actually going to do and what's going to happen. and then i think you're then going to see a bit more of an interesting i thought i was bad at waffling, but she is. she takes the biscuit. yeah, yeah. she really knows how to waffle. >> well i think she combines waffling with wine. >> what. she's wine. you know that's not getting misogynistic. yes. whining. no wine . oh, yes. whining. no wine. oh, alcohol i see. sorry, this is this is, it's a slightly false story here. the reason why she's raised so much money is because the democrats were very consciously holding back their donations because they saw , it donations because they saw, it good money after bad in terms of biden. so they've been holding it. now they've got someone who is viable, whether she's going to win or not. but she's certainly viable. and now they're pumping all that money into into the election process. so it's not that i think people are more excited, but that's to
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not say that this, like as you say, would be the nominee, that they would pick if given actual a vote. >> do you think there's a chance kamala could be replaced? i mean, there's talk of michelle obama stepping in, possibly another, you know , democrat another, you know, democrat bigwig stepping in. do you think kamala has been now that obama's come out and backed kamala, do you think? >> i think i think the republicans played a terrible game of chess here. i think they should have tried to keep biden in as long as possible. well, i think they were. and that's why trump they went they went all out attacking him. surely that was the debate you saw in the debate. >> trump was actually holding back. and you think so? oh yeah. yeah. he he really. because the trouble is i mean it was hard to keep him in because he was so he was oh i think he should have actually been complimenting him. >> he should have said, oh, i'm never going to win against you and then saved all his, you know, point mister bait later on. yeah, yeah, yeah. really good. oh am i step down and vote for you myself. you know, just until the last minute and then gone. this guy's an idiot. he's lost it, you know, he's completely senile, so. but anyway, let's we'll see what happens. i think, she hasn't said enough yet. yeah, to give
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us. to give us much. yeah. that's my insight as well. we'll see what happens . my hot take. see what happens. my hot take. thanks for tuning in for this insightful program where we really take the news out of vice president xi hasn't made much of an impact. yeah, but there's an argument that she's been deliberately held back by the biden administration. >> she sounds terrible when she talks. well, possibly. >> yeah, but that's. but you know, that's why finally, josh, what's in the front cover of the daily star, too hot to work. and this is for people like carrie and myself. where we are too attractive to go to work. i think that's the gist of it. i haven't read it properly, but that's what i took away. oh, no. no, it's about the heat. yes, 33 c. searing heat c6 double, which is it's not the you know, it's people going, yeah, i'm going to it's not they're not too hot to work. they would be able to actually work, but they also are more able to go to the pub. yeah. >> and i think of course we yeah we have, we have a phrase that we have, we have a phrase that we say in the uk that helps us to deal with and ameliorate the effect of a really hot day is we
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say to each other, it's hot. >> yeah, yeah. and we do that every half an hour and it makes us feel better about it. and then the other person agrees and they don't do that in other hot countries. you know, they just kind of accept it's hot. well, there's something that we like to mention it. >> there's something that i've noficedin >> there's something that i've noticed in britain every time summer starts, all the comedians, every single comedian does videos about what british people are like in hot weather. oh, really? every year that's accounting. it's not the first swallow of spring and it hasn't changed people at all. >> i don't because i'm too lazy to make videos. yeah, but i'm too hot as a person. yeah. okay. >> well, that's the front page is dealt with. but coming up we've got the latest developments in the manchester airport incident. scotland radical and the olympics gets even
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welcome back to headliners. your first look at monday's top stories i'm leo kearse and with
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me are carrie marks and josh howie kicking off this section with the sun and new footage has emerged showing some of the build up to the manchester airport head kick. >> carrie, is that what it's been called now? the manchester airport head kick? that was the most concise way i can think of, because if you say the problem is there's so much head kicks in manchester, you have to be very specific about location. the airport head kick. yeah, which part of the airport head kick as well? yeah, the car park, two. car park, two head kick. so this is what the sun described as shock footage. everything is shock footage. everything is shock these days. and every single story. shock that i'm constantly shocked, and this was the footage where, we originally saw the footage of a policeman kicking someone in the head who was down, which looked very wrong. and then. andy burnham . wrong. and then. andy burnham. the manchester mayor said there are he's seen the whole video, and there's two sides to this story, which there are two more stories. >> we've all seen the whole video now, and it's i mean, it's shocking. it shows the man who was who was kicked in the head. he was, you know, punching
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people, attacking people. the policeman who did the kicking was was punched in the face about nine times. >> now, now they're saying it started on a plane with, with their mother being attacked. and then they reacted this way, which, okay, that might have happened, but not with the police. make sense to then attack the police as well? yeah, i think we're on the question of what is a fair cop, you know? what is a cop fairly allowed to do in response? because i don't know how police training works. i mean, they're taught to fight, surely? yeah right. but they have this window in which they can attack . but only so far. but can attack. but only so far. but i don't know how far it goes. if you're being attacked yourself. and american cops would have shot someone at that point. yeah, yeah. well, also, training is not going to include being punched in the face nine times and then say, now what are you going to do? like eight times. eight times possibly. we'll see how good the training. i will say quickly the women were. here's the clip here. these women are amazing. the police women, they were like they were punched in the face and they were straight back up getting their tasers out. i were straight back up getting theirtasers out. i mean, were straight back up getting their tasers out. i mean, that was pretty impressive training. they were on it. they were professional, we have to be careful somewhat what we say
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because no one has been charged yet. we should say that. so we have to tread carefully, like the officer and, this does joke. thanks. thanks, mate. it's not really a tread, though, is it? it's more of a stamp. well, this is what they're going to argue in a court of law, i'm sure. but i think annie bowerman has been very brave to come forward and say that there are two sides. >> honestly, to sit on that fence. >> yeah. it's incredible to say it . no, i mean, that's really it. no, i mean, that's really brave of someone. of someone on the left to come forward and admit that there are two sides to this. so, but we've seen, we've seen women in the line of work , police, women being work, police, women being punched in the face, a nose broken. >> where are the feminists coming out to say, yeah, yeah, yeah, it's terrible . yeah, it's terrible. >> yes. i mean, meaning it's beyond. it's beyond the it's beyond. it's beyond the it's beyond. it's beyond the it's beyond. it's beyond the remit of their job, beyond. it's beyond the remit of theirjob, isn't it, to get punched in the face. yeah. i don't think that should be acceptable. and then there's already people coming out and protesting. not many at this point i think it's about 100 people. and so why don't people count to ten anymore? do you
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remember when people used to just say pause and wait to get a whole story? but these protests started as soon as the first video came out. and you'd think, in this day and age, when are people going to learn this is a part of a video? wait to see the whole thing with everything going on, always wait a few days. hear the story. well actually you're right saying that what the interesting phenomenon i've seen today onune phenomenon i've seen today online is the people doubling down on it. so the people have said, well, this doesn't change anything. and actually and that's been kind of mental to, to see because they can't just go. it's understandable. yes. was it legal? i don't know. that's what's going to be found out. he's going you know there's an investigation and whatnot. but it's certainly understandable. his response yeah, but yeah, the people doubung yeah, but yeah, the people doubling down, it's like they've been kicked in the head or something. it's crazy. yeah we've got the deal now. >> and tommy robinson says he was arrested, but the police say they didn't arrest him. does this mean he's been kidnapped by people dressed as police? possibly the village people? josh. >> indeed . yeah. met police say >> indeed. yeah. met police say they have not arrested tommy robinson. so yesterday. or if you're watching this, tomorrow,
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saturday, there was obviously this big march in trafalgar square. he showed this film that he's made, which is all about, this court case that he was involved in, and he was ordered by the court to not not show it. so he has broken that. he's broken the law. he's broken that injunction . injunction. >> well, it's a court order. >> well, it's a court order. >> it was a court order. yeah. very explicit as well, today i did something that i wish i hadnt did something that i wish i hadn't done. i did some work, and i actually looked into this and i actually looked into this a little bit more and watched some videos and read some things and whatever it it seems like . and whatever it it seems like. and i hesitate to say this because i, i don't want to get a bunch of tommy robinson fans, messaging me because i'm already spending most of my time dealing with all the far left cranks and the islamists who hate me. but it does seem like he's wrong. he did break the law by showing this video , and but the police
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this video, and but the police are saying they haven't actually arrested him at all. the question is why? when he knew he would be arrested , did he show would be arrested, did he show this video, not that he has been arrested. and there are arguments. >> i guess some people would say that protest protest doesn't always stay within the remit of law , or in this case, a court order. >> yeah, but he was proven to have not made his case. so, i mean, no proven by a court like proven by a court. >> that's not i mean, some people would say like just stop oil would say, well, the court says that we shouldn't do it, but we're still going to do it. >> okay. well, but that's but then they broken the law and they deserve to go to jail. right. the question is knowing that he very could go to jail by doing this, by breaking this court order, the question is, why is he doing that? and there are arguments put out there that there's this fundraising that he makes a lot of money by saying, free tommy and all of this stuff. and that money goes to different things. that's the argument that's out there. >> but then if it does come out that the police didn't arrest him, it's going to damage his credibility, isn't it? >> kyrie. oh no . he'll get >> kyrie. oh no. he'll get arrested eventually. you know there'll be something else
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around the corner. i like this as a headline. the police say they have not arrested tommy robinson. i think it's lovely to have a headline of who the police haven't arrested for a change. i mean, they could probably go around everyone in the country and make us all feel good about who's not been arrested. look, he says many controversial things to put it politely. and he has got some record and he did show a film which was in fact banned by the courts, of course, but there's a double standard going on here whilst we have terrorism. we have marches going on every week supporting terrorist activity. chants of death to jews and chants for the houthi to attack british ships and so on, if that's going to be allowed, then we can't have this double standard anymore. but that double standard, sorry. what i was talking about is the specifically this film. i'm not talking about the march yesterday. and you're right. and the double standard was no more apparent than you had the anti—racist march who were marching, who were chanting for the death to jews, which some would say is quite racist. so yeah, that hypocrisy was fully on display. but i'm not talking about the march. i'm talking
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about the march. i'm talking about specifically breaking the law in terms of showing this film to start arresting people with spreading misinformation. and you have to arrest the bbc. so where does this stop? >> it sounds like a good idea, moving on, we've got the daily mail with good news for scottish fans of islamic fundamentalism . kyrie. >> okay, so this is the, this is the this is sheikh yasser yasser al habib 45. because we always get their age and he's a radical cleric who's planning to , have cleric who's planning to, have a by by an island. he's going to purchase an island off the coast of scotland, buy an island. this is , the island is for all is, the island is for all believers, but it's an islamic state so i don't know whether it's going to be really for all believers. it's to be run by, shana believers. it's to be run by, sharia law, which i don't think all believers necessarily go for. i've always said there's not understands there's not enough sharia law in scotland. yeah, yeah . and, and he's yeah, yeah. and, and he's already got a £3 million pot, which means that the amount of money he's got, he hasn't got £3 million of pot. otherwise i would be going to his island and it would sound like a that's a good island . yeah, that's a good
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good island. yeah, that's a good island. >> the £3 million doesn't sound quite as fun as that. i mean, he already, according to this, he already, according to this, he already runs military style training camps. >> sure, but once the silly man. i'll tell you that. >> why is he silly? i mean, he's he's got loads of hundreds of thousands of followers and they give him lots of money. and for some reason, i don't understand why tommy robinson, the whole system comes down on him, piles on him for like, the slightest infraction. >> robinson suggested this same idea of putting muslims on an island. everyone would be mad. >> yeah, but i mean, if tommy robinson had military style training camps , you know, i training camps, you know, i mean, that that would be surely a cause to arrest him. and instead, these, these military style training camps are allowed to go ahead. but it's okay because they're islamist. >> yeah , absolutely. it's >> yeah, absolutely. it's insane. any of those islands next to this island, i would be. they must be crapping themselves. yeah, because, you know , while the locals are going know, while the locals are going to get captured and turned into sex slaves, they're probably looking forward. there's going to be like , islamist vikings to be like, islamist vikings sort of going around the hebrides, so, yeah. why is this person he's got his global headquarters in south
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buckinghamshire . he's too buckinghamshire. he's too extreme for kuwait. he's got an asylum seeker. so what is the logistics here? like? why do we have to if he's too extreme for kuwait, why do we have to get him? >> that's what. >> that's what. >> that's what blew my mind. he's from kuwait. and what we keep hearing is that the reason why we're having so much immigration is because of british and other western interference in the middle east. the reason why we interfered in the middle east was because kuwait invited us, begged us to come out to protect them from saddam hussein's invasion, by the way. so he's claimed asylum here because, as josh says, he's too extreme for kuwait. >> so if he goes to kuwait, he'll get in trouble. he should be in trouble. i mean, he urges the killing of wahhabis. yeah. so it's a pejorative term for saudi rulers and officials. i mean , this i mean this guy. mean, this i mean this guy. i don't think wahhabism is an amazing ideology either, but i mean, this this guy is a is a he's a total wrong'un also, he's got this satellite tv called fadak tv, which, which is run in a £2 million converted church hall. >> ironic , and ofcom haven't >> ironic, and ofcom haven't been able to shut it down, you
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know, so they're spending too much time , you know, crusading much time, you know, crusading against our cash appeal or whatever it was that we did here. and they're not going to shut this guy, this i mean, it's crazy who's going to do this island. for i'm him having his island. for i'm him having his island. he says he wants to create a muslim homeland, because there's no muslim homeland. right around 55 countries. 55 of them. yeah. there's not one renee enough. >> we need a rainy one off the coast of scotland. but yeah, if he is interested in putting on a version of headliners on his satellite channel, then maybe we can talk. >> you know what? he probably he probably find it easier to book comics than we do . yeah. comics than we do. yeah. >> we've got the express note , >> we've got the express note, the headliners, we've got the express note . with the fallout express note. with the fallout from the paris olympics opening ceremony, the degenerate fat transgender smurfs mocking christianity wasn't popular with the sponsors. josh. >> yeah, olympics backlash escalates as major sponsor pulls out over blasphemous opening ceremony. this is ceasefire, which is some mississippi based telecommunications thing. they they've pulled out, also,
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weirdly, they, the olympics themselves have pulled the ceremony from youtube and but they're talking. yeah, they have , they're talking. yeah, they have, but, yeah, they've done it. yeah. and they're saying, here's the thing here is that they're saying like , we did this because saying like, we did this because we're not trying to be subversive or whatever, and they're like, yes. you specifically said before you were trying to be subversive, and then they're trying to say that it was all about inclusion. well, that's not inclusion for the 2 billion christians out there or whatever. and also then they say diversity means being together. and it's like, and to be fair, this has brought people together . it's be fair, this has brought people together. it's brought a lot of people who absolutely hated it. my people who absolutely hated it. my issue with it was it was a crass and just unoriginal and just naff, but b just the hypocrisy there. if you want to be brave and show what what breaking all the rules. why don't you do a charlie hebdo on this? no, you're not going to do that, are you? because you're hypocrites. yeah. >> yes . what do you make of it >> yes. what do you make of it kyrie. did you did you. well first of all i mean my first stance is always that there is nothing above mockery.
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>> i'm not the mockery side of it doesn't bother me whatsoever. whether whatever ideology beliefs kerry's got stupid thing on his chin. we could mock it. it's absolutely fine. mock it all. you like . actually, i do all. you like. actually, i do myself, what was funny was it started off with people saying, people insisting that there was nothing to do with jesus or the last supper. it was a re—enactment or an interpretation of dionysus. the greek god. which still, why is france is an opening ceremony. having a go at greek god anyway doesn't make much sense. but but of course, the greek god is depicted by because they're trying to be inclusive to blue painted men who are gods. i thought it was avatar so no, it was an avatar smurf, it was clearly. but clearly it's depicting the last supper. which, which is, you know, it's making fun of a picture, which is quite funny in itself. and there was a lovely cartoon of there was a lovely cartoon of the 13 sitting around the table there, which, and the caption said, we'll have, can we get a table for, for 26, please? and the, the maitre d says there's only 13 of you. and he says,
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yeah, but we, we like to all sit on one side and also and also also the enough food for twice as many people, i mean, the size of i don't know why you'd have somebody that fat at the olympics representing the olympics representing the olympics because i don't know, some sort of eating because they want to be represented in the olympics are they know that we've got a long way from, from asking us to stop judging, you know, society, to stop judging what people decide to put of other people's bodies into their bodies, to now a point where what they want to put into other people's bodies is being rammed down our throats in every possible way imaginable. she could fit the 12 disciples. i'm not sure i had any place in it. it didn't bother me at all, but it seems like. did you see the quy's it seems like. did you see the guy's testicle? did you see? i did see. did you see it right next to a child as well? yeah. someone's testicle was poking out. >> yeah, that was almost a satire that was almost a satire of gender, ideology and drag events in front of children because it literally had a man's testicle next to a child, anyway, that's part two. done. but coming up, we've got testicles, we've got more testicles, we've got more testicles, we've got trans world sport, racial segregation back again , and gen z or gen z, if again, and gen z or gen z, if you're british, coming to
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save the day. don't go anywhere
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welcome back to headliners. we've got the daily mail now. and the number of transgender competitors in the olympics is halved. i think they've all been moved to the dancing in the opening ceremony. >> josh very good, number of transgender athletes competing in paris olympics is halved compared to tokyo in 2020, after a major rule change, which the big rule change was that they bought in was that people couldn't cheat anymore. that seemed to win . so it's halved seemed to win. so it's halved from 4 to 2. but actually that's fine because the two that exist are actually competing in their own sex class. so it's two women, biological women , one women, biological women, one who's non—binary, who wants to have a breast removed. she sounds totally mentally normal. and, and someone else. so you know what? if you're going to compete in your own sex class, i don't care how you identify. yeah, the important thing was we
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don't have what we have happened in the last olympics where you had, laurel hubbard, who was a new zealand weightlifter, 38 years old, beautiful woman. yeah. beautiful woman. but, yeah, just a bloke basically saying i'm a woman and came in and took an actual young maori woman's place, and that has not happened this time because the rules have been tightened, but they have done it by the, the ioc committee, the international olympics committee have been cowards and they've gone down the lisa nandy. pass the buck, strategy of saying each sport is up to each sport, but most sports now have actually gone, oh yeah, men and women are different. yeah weirdly. yeah. >> i mean, what do you think of it, kerri? were you enjoying seeing, big lumpy blokes in leotards prancing around? >> i like men winning everything. no it's really nice. >> it's a it's glory. seems to be a misogynist. you can. you can cheer on men. eliminating women from sport. and. and you're the good guy. >> how did this ever become an issue? you know, this story is telling us that the number of
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trans athletes has , has trans athletes has, has decreased by half. last time it was four. and so we're down to two now. it's, you know, it's not a massive change, but of course we're still really it's all about trans women. it's not about trans men. because when you start getting trans men , you start getting trans men, you're just people who have self id'd as men from being women winning against men's sports. then you're going to prove to me this is a magical thinking, you know, then you're going to say, if a woman can say, i'm a man, and then she's doing really well in a race against men , then in a race against men, then yeah, then, wow, it works. well, then we've got something. challenges science. well, you've exactly said it because the two trans people who are are trans men. i know it's they're not going well. i'm a man for the sport and trying to desperately get into man sports. no. oh. but this. but i'll be a woman if it means i might actually win something. yeah. was that your. >> we've got the guardian now. >> we've got the guardian now. >> that's my trans man. you've been working. >> we've got a guardian now with some good news for racist. kit harington from game of thrones. has praised racial segregation very well .
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very well. >> has he? i don't know, i fully go with that. he's praising, blackout theatre nights, which didn't sound good. at first i thought they meant performing in the dark. >> a racial segregation is when you separate people by by race, which is what they know. >> i've heard of it, but, it's just not a great name for it, but. but what it is, it's the. a new play, and they're going to have blackout nights, which means. and it means nights that are for black people, black audiences. but it doesn't mean that every night is going to be for black audiences. it means that maybe 1 or 2 nights of black audiences and actually white people can still buy tickets for it. so it's not actually segregation in that way. >> people can still go, yes, white people can still go. >> but it's aimed at black. unwelcome. no, i'm going to say something here. i've performed to black audiences and they're brilliant. i would do the same. if i'm doing a run in edinburgh, if i'm doing a run in edinburgh, i would say i would have a black audience night because it's the most rewarding thing for a performer. you get applauded louder, you get bigger laughs, you get more emotion. it's black. audiences are brilliant. so you judge. >> you judge audiences based on the colour of their skin.
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>> absolutely. based on experience, i would say absolutely. i totally agree with you. recommend all white people to buy tickets for the black only night because it's such a good night. it's great. fill it with white people. it'll be brilliant. black audiences in comedy absolutely are best and commit and have a lot of laugh . commit and have a lot of laugh. worst audience jewish audiences. oh, really? really? yeah, because it's like. it's like it's like performing in liverpool. it's like, oh, we know our comedy and you it's tough. which, i will be in liverpool this weekend if anyone wants to come to the hot water comedy club, but yeah, this is the concept is wrong because of course, like anything, first of all, it's black identifying audiences, which is like, what is that? what does that mean? the olympics? yeah, ridiculously. but also like any of these things that when we're deaung of these things that when we're dealing with identity politics, just flip it to any other ethnicity and it's wrong. and you know what? there was a jewish play recently about a year or two ago, which i went to see and anybody who was not jewish, who came to see it, it was called like jews talking. and it was all about jewish experience or whatever, and anti—semitism. any non—jews anti —semitism. any non—jews would anti—semitism. any non—jews would come. you'd be like, please come and see this show
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and learn about our experience. i wouldn't want it to be. there was predominantly jewish people there, and i'm sure jewish people got arguably something different or more out of it. but the idea of making the enforcing or saying, please, we just want to talk amongst ourselves and make this just a jewish only vote because we feel safe is ridiculous. >> and also, if they did it with white people, that would be condemned as racist, white, intolerant bigotry and the person would be jailed. >> right? i fully agree with you . >> right? i fully agree with you. except black audience is a brilliant i'm sticking on this. >> we've got the times now , and >> we've got the times now, and elon musk's takeover of twitter is finally paying off. let that sink in. >> i don't think financially it is, and he's, you know, i when twitter started, it was it was fun, you know, i mean, it was it was really good fun. and now it's more he has brought. no, he's brought something to it which is interesting. he's not a humorous man, is he? he's, but he lacks in humour. he lacks in other stuff, too. but he's he's it costs him 44 billion to buy it costs him 44 billion to buy it . and i see what he's doing it. and i see what he's doing with it is he's trying to make,
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make it as a space where literally anything goes , but. literally anything goes, but. and there's a level of chaotic insanity to it. now, i don't know if you've ever seen it. you've seen the new thing. if you look at a video, it instantly at the end flips to another video that you haven't, andifs another video that you haven't, and it's not based on your history. one minute you're looking at a video of a cute kid and the next minute it's a child being stabbed to death and you 90, being stabbed to death and you go, i didn't ask to see that, but i kind of like the chaos of it. yeah, and i think really, what we should be encouraging people to do is to learn how to use it better is to not follow non—stop activists. it's not good for your brain. follow experts. yeah. follow people who know about if you're if you're interested in what's going on with wars and so on, follow experts in war or follow experts in, you know, in how geopolitics works and so on. >> terrible advice there from kerry on to how use social media. but it's interesting that elon musk, he bought twitter pretty much because his son was transitioned, and he feels that it wasn't the best option for his son, and he wanted to defeat the woke mind virus as well. >> troitsa before was an illiberal, place where people were shut down for saying, you
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know, there were only two sexes and stuff like that. he has changed it. i'm happy to say that i receive a lot more anti—semitic abuse than before. so that's a good thing. you're welcome, yeah . you just hear welcome, yeah. you just hear you. yeah. it's this. it's this sockpuppet account. silly jew. no, but also, i'm allowed to say that. yeah, you should probably point out that kyrie is jewish for now. like like this by the way, we're only pointed out to people on the radio who can't see him. so, but, i'm allowed to say that. so because you're a radio, you're radio. community notes are great. that's that's been a lot of fun. there have there are big developments to it, there are there are also some things that are slightly negative to it, but the argument in this article is basically saying that there has been no alternative space for, news to have the impact, like joe biden resigning or saying he was going to not start. that was released on twitter first. so you really it is for people like us who
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work in this kind of this the commentary or whatever this is. twitter is absolutely where you go first to get the stuff before you then see it six hours later in a newspaper and seven hours later on headliners or whatever before. >> and it might not be the most popular social media channel. it might not be the one with the most users, but all the smart people are on twitter. i think there are some really smart. >> yeah there are. that's what i was saying before with my advice, you know, is to find the smart people and follow them. and the other advice i give you is don't look at the for you page.the is don't look at the for you page. the for you tab, it's awful. it shows you what other people look. if you stick to the following where you feel safe and warm. can i say one more thing? just to carry on? okay. it does. it's just how you use it in terms of you just can't believe anybody. just double, triple check everything that you find. and i think as people get used to that element of things and then it comes to like newspapers, all your sources get a million sources don't. but obviously believe me , i right obviously believe me, i right believe us. we're all right. stuff. yeah >> headliners. headliners that yeah that's it for part three. but after the break we've got tradwives sad wives and we'll high as a type. i know
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break. welcome back to the final section of headliners. we've got the eye now in thailand. has legalised cannabis, but it sounds like they're making a hash of it. >> hey. yes. >> hey. yes. >> legalised and then talked about repealing and then decided. that's not going to work well with the public. this is, thailand's health minister who, they, they call him here. thailand's. thailand's health minister, and never name him throughout the whole thing. i don't think so. must be complicated. i just have to trust that there is one, so he of no name, was had threatened to put cannabis back on the narcotics blacklist. and then he had a spliff, and he thought about it, and he thought, no, i'm going to keep it on because it's making a lot of increased sales on chocolate, and basically the law came out saying that now the actual law was that it could be used for medical purposes and contain no more than 0.2% thc
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tetrahydrocannabinol , which is tetrahydrocannabinol, which is the active ingredient, and we're told here that it's similar with thailand's prostitution law. i think you're only allowed to use 0.2% penis, but then they would try to repeal that. it didn't work out, and people started changing their what it was. everyone took advantage of the law because it wasn't clear enough as to what was allowed and what wasn't . and it became a and what wasn't. and it became a free for all. yes. >> you've got an unregulated market where people are selling plants that contain chemicals and are grown improperly. >> there's any chemicals they can throw in, hey, we can do whatever we like now. >> and then we'll have them with a 15 year old boy who turned hysterical and started trying to stab people around. there's always one of those, isn't there? yeah there's always someone who has to ruin it, you know, in amsterdam, they repealed some of the mushroom laws because someone jumped out of a window or off a bridge and so one person, a lightweight. come on. yeah. unfortunately not. well, but, yeah, they also they repealed it because two activists went on hunger strike and to be fair, if you're on weed, that is particularly tough .
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weed, that is particularly tough. yeah, that's my first joke in three weeks on headlining we've got the daily meal now with bad news for the gender pay gap. >> one of the main ways for women to get rich is feeling the squeeze. women to get rich is feeling the squeeze . josh. squeeze. josh. >> yeah, divorcees can no longer expect big payouts for life, says top lawyer at josh howie reads to his wife. tell yeah, you've got to stick around for longer now. so it used to be, yeah, you get married and there's a really funny story here. this younger woman who married some old rich dude. and then after a couple of years, she was like, i'm out of here now. and then she found out that she had to get a job. and she's like, it's like, no, she said, i can't work . they were like, no, can't work. they were like, no, you're only 48 or so because she was an accountant. and they prove now that that you could earn . so the point is from earn. so the point is from before you would have this expectation. you would be taking care of maintenance fees forever. >> lifestyle is you had and now it's like, no, you won't . it's like, no, you won't. >> essentially, you can still get a part of that money that you were there for as they earned the money. like, and i
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think that's only fair because there is whether it's a man or there is whether it's a man or the woman who owned the most money. the point is, in a relationship, you are part of that, that that balance. >> you're looking after the kids while they're earning. >> exactly. so that's all fair. but the idea that you should be then taking care of forever and not have to do any work is ridiculous. so now i guess a lot of people aren't going to get divorced in the uk anymore. yeah, things have changed. women work now. these rules are put there. when women weren't working as much and they need equality. welcome to equality . equality. welcome to equality. i'm sorry how it's worked out. >> and we've got the independent now and the trend for tradwives who are unpopular with the degenerate communists who write for mass media. kyrees. >> right. >> right. >> this is women who are moving of women who are going back to traditional womanhood. yeah, of the past, of being housewives and so on, because they want to get their alimony back. you know, they realised they read the last story and they panicked and they go, well, i don't think we should have left that story so soon because you have been divorced. i'm sure you had a lot of insight. yeah. >> how much money did you get? >> how much money did you get? >> i was going to talk for ages about my divorce. we've been
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great fun for everyone, how much money did i get? yeah, it doesn't work out that way , she doesn't work out that way, she was less successful than him this is. we were. we had mutual agreement and were friends. thank you very much. nice. you know. sorry. that's to good hean know. sorry. that's to good hear. you want it to be. actually, tell us a bit of tradwives, okay. well, they're tradwives. we don't understand. they want traditional wifey ness , they want traditional wifey ness, and they're they're returning to. and apparently there's, there's all kinds of, negative sides of it because it's largely a conservative male fantasy we've been told here. so this is social media submissive, but, you know, social media influencers who who, you know, like the tradwives, but they quite often have some quite non—traditional ways of doing things as well . well, it is things as well. well, it is interesting because first of all, the person they're talking about, this person, neeleman or something, she's got 17 million followers, so she must be raking it in. yeah. so she's probably now actually the breadwinner, which is not traditional. so she should lose the followers and then just go into a continuous loop. there's a few things that he also reveals about himself. the guy who's writing this, first of all, the idea that this
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is just a male fantasy, i think is just a male fantasy, i think is wrong. i think there are women who actually definitely like the idea and that's not talked about at all. and also then he sort of says, oh, it must be men, because i went on onlyfans and i found a bunch of women. that doesn't sound traditional. well, i just say, he reveals it. he went, i thought he was doing it for research on research articles about him. really, isn't it? he's complaining about, traditional wife influencers engaging shore is nearly over. >> so let's take another quick look at monday's front pages. the daily mail leads with gps. we will bring nhs to a standstill. lovely. the guardian has reeves paves way for cuts and tax rises to fix finances. the times has squeeze on spending to lift uk from £20 billion black hole. the daily telegraph has israel to retaliate against hezbollah. the financial times has harris raises $200 million in her first week of record shattering election campaign. and the daily star has too hot to work. and that's it for tonight's show thanks to keri and josh. headliners is back tomorrow at 11, and if you're watching at 5 am, then stay tuned for a.m, then stay tuned for breakfast. but for now, it's
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good night or good morning booyakasha bye . booyakasha bye. >> that warm feeling inside from boxt boilers sponsors of weather on gb news. >> hello there! welcome to your latest gb news weather forecast from the met office. high pressure in charge for the next few days. it stays largely dry and warm. plenty of sunshine though. turns increasingly humid and we see the risk of thunderstorms increasing as we get towards the middle of the week. as this area of low pressure moves in from the south. something to stay tuned to over the coming days. but for the rest of sunday and overnight, it's a quiet night to come. plenty of clear skies across england and wales, thicker cloud across northern ireland, perhaps into southern scotland, could give 1 or 2 light showers and temperatures for the vast majority holding up in double figures 12 to 16 celsius to start monday and a dry note for many. if we zoom in to scotland, we can see a
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cloudier start here, but some sunny spells, a weak weather front bringing some patchy rain across the western isles . a few across the western isles. a few shallow mist and fog patches quickly clearing and again hazy sunshine for northern ireland. northern england as well, but largely dry temperatures in the mid to high teens and plenty of blue skies across the rest of england and wales, and temperatures starting to rise quite quickly as we go through the day, particularly by the afternoon. some strong summer sunshine developing blue skies for the vast majority. isolated chance of a light shower across the borders region. otherwise, most places dry this week. weather front just slowly pushes into mainland scotland. the far west there, but temperatures holding up generally 2122 in the north to around 25 to 29 across parts of england and wales. so feeling hot in that sunshine dunng feeling hot in that sunshine during the afternoon . another during the afternoon. another sunny start on tuesday. a weak weather front pushing south may just give a little bit more cloud into northern england .
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cloud into northern england. nonh cloud into northern england. north wales otherwise, most places dry once again, an afternoon shower, perhaps over northern ireland, turning increasingly humid as we go through the middle part of the week. temperatures peaking around wednesday . around wednesday. >> a brighter outlook with boxt solar sponsors of weather on gb news
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>> good evening. it's 9:00. on television. on radio and online. in the united kingdom and across the world. this is mark dolan tonight in my big opinion. the tories don't get it with the rise of reform uk, the conservatives are in denial about what happened on the 4th of july. so far, the uninspiring leadership election has failed to acknowledge a clear message from voters without a radical
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new approach, the tories will be out of power for a generation. in the big story, we will bring you all of the runners and riders for the tory leadership in the company of a top conservative insider and in my take at ten, new footage has emerged in regard to violent scenes at manchester airport. there's more to this story than meets the eye. why can't cops be allowed to do their job? this wouldn't be a story anywhere else in the world. is it any wonder that officers are deserting the force ? and can deserting the force? and can team gb break all olympic records this year? i'll be asking legendary british sprinter darren campbell, m.b.e. really busy show tonight . new really busy show tonight. new developments on that story in manchester airport. so busy show. expect to get your
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messages, your emails all the rest of it. and let me tell you that director sebastian is on his own in the gallery this evening , so anything could evening, so anything could happen. two hours of big opinion, big debate and big entertainment. i'll see you after the headlines and ray addison . addison. >> cheers, mark. good evening. i'm ray addison in the gb newsroom. our top stories. protesters gathered outside of downing street and scotland yard earlier demonstrating against the reported arrest of tommy robinson. his supporters say he was detained under anti—terror laws. it comes after a complaint was made after a film was allegedly shown at a central london rally yesterday, in breach of a high court order. two men in their 20s have died after a two seater light aeroplane crashed in a field in thornaby, near selby. north yorkshire police received an emergency call just before 10:00 this morning. it's thought the victims are the pilot and his
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passenger. their next of kin, kin, have been informed. an investigation is now underway. manchester's mayor is urging people not to rush to judgement following thursday's incident at the airport. there, andy burnham's comments follow the publication of new video obtained by manchester evening news, which appears to show a violent altercation in the lead up to a suspect being kicked by a police officer . the constable a police officer. the constable involved is now under criminal investigation for assault. mr burnham says it's a complicated situation with two sides to it . situation with two sides to it. priti patel has become the fifth mp to enter the tory leadership race. the former home secretary says she can unite the party and turn it back into a, quote, winning machine. she joins james cleverly, robert jenrick, tom tugendhat and mel stride running to replace their ex—boss rishi sunak. to replace their ex—boss rishi sunak . nominations close sunak. nominations close tomorrow . the foreign secretary tomorrow. the foreign secretary is condemning a rocket strike in
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