tv Headliners Replay GB News November 30, 2022 5:00am-6:00am GMT
5:00 am
good evening. this is the latest from the gb newsroom have reached the last 16 of the world cup after beating wales . these cup after beating wales. these were the scenes of ecstatic england cheering as a fan zone in manchester as goals from marcus rashford and phil foden gave england victory. it means wales are now out of the tournament and. england face senegalin tournament and. england face senegal in the knockout . our senegal in the knockout. our reporter paul hawkins to fans from both teams the game. i really excited because england scored three goals and i'm
5:01 am
really because i want them to get into the final and we have a very flat performance that i given we have to win the game made the atmosphere for me but flat and disappointing but very proud of the boys it's looks like it should be coming home. the performance will improve second round hopefully and then let's see what happens . a man let's see what happens. a man has been arrested in gloucestershire in connection with the death . at least 27 with the death. at least 27 people who drowned the english channelin people who drowned the english channel in a dinghy last year. 32 year old haram ahmed abu bakr is accused of being a member of a gang behind the crossing . a gang behind the crossing. he'll appear at westminster as magistrate court tomorrow. two people survived, while four have still not been found . an error still not been found. an error at a lab, which saw thousands of positive covid cases reported as negative could have led to the deaths of 20 people. investigators of the uk health security agency say the mistake at the wolfram too lab meant nearly 40,000 pcr tests were
5:02 am
wrongly reported between september and october last year. researchers also almost 700 additional hospital admissions that may not otherwise have occurred . bosses at the uk hsa occurred. bosses at the uk hsa say they fully accept the findings and recommendations made in the report . china's made in the report. china's ambassador to the uk has been summoned to the foreign office over a diplomatic row following the arrest and alleged beating of a bbc journalist . covid of a bbc journalist. covid protests . a heavy police protests. a heavy police presence is being in several cities in china to deter further protests after unrest over the weekend . earlier today, the weekend. earlier today, the foreign office minister an urgent question on the matter. he says the uk is demanding a full and, thorough explanation over arrest of ed lawrence . tv over arrest of ed lawrence. tv onune over arrest of ed lawrence. tv online and the ap radio. this is gb news a over to headliners .
5:03 am
gb news a over to headliners. hello welcome to headliners. i'm simon evans . hello welcome to headliners. i'm simon evans. i'm joined tonight by two headliners of headliners leo kearse and diana spencer. back after a short from the well my . rulings back after a short from the well my. rulings i'm in imagine you've been if you consider this a ruling. you see us still ruling over us because anyway we're going lose to get through the evening. fascinating frustrating and fun. but first, let's peek the papers. we start with daily mail. they're leading with daily mail. they're leading with the christmas turkey shortage and of course, the foot will results. we have to telegraph with ambulance staff to first strike for 30 issues and familiar image there from qatar and the islands with uk christians in minority for the
5:04 am
first time since the dark which is an interesting spinning that certainly the guardian have drug success heralds new era of progress alzheimer's research and since this puts church role in the spotlight the mirror have chooses to go with big rash bosch . yeah i'm not quite bosch. yeah i'm not quite convinced by the times leads with dementia drug slows decline and rashford fires england into second round. and finally the daily star the hangover thousands left feeling good woozy wednesday as england heroes cruise to three nil win well those are the front pages let's take a look at them in some detail . let's take a look at them in some detail. so let's take a look at them in some detail . so let's let's take a look at them in some detail. so let's begin let's take a look at them in some detail . so let's begin with some detail. so let's begin with the leading story from wednesday's guardian. leo yes. about this alzheimer's . they
5:05 am
about this alzheimer's. they were clinical trials of a drug called lacan. lacan cancer. lacan which i think stops you turning a werewolf. it's somehow you've written it down backwards . and i think if you can see it, then that is proof that you don't have alzheimer's. so i have alzheimer's, but they've done clinical trials. the slow , done clinical trials. the slow, the decline and early stages of alzheimer's. and that's incredibly positive and will make them of money because people have got are older who tend to live accumulated wealth so they can get of that off. it's like what the tax plan should be cynical but i think it will get it down they will get it in this country on on prescription. so i'm going to be paying prescription. so i'm going to be paying for that as well. just this to. but on the other hand, your parents won't be you know, won't fail to your face and cause existential every honestly it would be fine if they did and it's probably a bit late for them anyway. and the other , the them anyway. and the other, the other story, and this is a bit more , a bit beefier it's been
5:06 am
more, a bit beefier it's been relegated a small section because it's the guardian they don't want anybody to know about this are this but the census are trickling they're done. trickling out and they're done. in of the show, the england in 2021 of the show, the england wales christian wales are no minority christian . the amount of people call themselves christians falling from 59.3% to 46.2. so less than half now. and the other big whammy is the white people are now a minority and lots of parts of the country so in london and, birmingham white british people no minority which i it's good news in some ways because we're going to be able to get in some adverts now but it really is startling apparently 37, 37% of people in london are white, british, white, british which consider it as the capital. it was a minority even at the last census 20, 2011. we have a i mean it was i we i left by then with perhaps i tilted the balance cup down to brighton . balance cup down to brighton. but yes, it's quite striking . i but yes, it's quite striking. i think manchester is well now
5:07 am
certainly there is a third city which is leicester and birmingham . yeah. yeah. so birmingham. yeah. yeah. so you've got the independent diane and that, that is a lead story the i should say it which has led the, the census story, but they're focusing on the christianity . yeah, they are. christianity. yeah, they are. because i guess what is interesting is that christianity has been dominant religion in the uk since . the year 597. i the uk since. the year 597. i mean before that we were doing well with stonehenge and we of had some lovely viking gods and a whole plethora of paganism. yeah, but then being christian has become, they say you know, being a definite of being english, but i think that people now because obviously there's been a lot of scandal in the church and obviously science has come long a long way. i think that you can still be sort of a divine person. you can still be a good person, but you don't have to necessarily quite yourself with christianity per say. so do i, that this is a bad
5:08 am
thing? not necessarily i think. i mean, i'll tell you i'll tell you one thing right now because christianity. all right. i'm a christian. but i think countries the christian culture has given rise to you know just western democracy and the sort of themes of equal and tolerance which i don't really agree with. but you know those are those are positive for a culture of the value human life. exactly wasn't it? i remember chesterton, who is a very interesting thinker on these things, says that if you get if you do away with get away, if you do away with christianity, you better have of the explanation for the plausible explanation for why every human life is equally valuable provide with valuable won't provide you with one. by 2050. islam going one. we'll by 2050. islam going to be the biggest religion in the uk so and we can see you know islamic tend not have the same sort universal themes of equality every you know human life being equal and sacred. do you think will people's lifestyles, do you think it will a dominant religion, though, is
5:09 am
that not also becoming denatured by materialism. i mean essentially materialism . essentially materialism. shopping is the new religion. right? what islam is , it's right? what islam is, it's a materialism. it seems that's not working in saudi arabia. show a show me in saudi arabia or iran where materialism has you had you show a previously christian country into which islamic immigration and has actually tilted it towards an islamic culture. why i'm one of those. why are we running that experiment anyway? i mean, to mix western liberal democracy, i think i agree with you. but i mean, i agree that it's a it's a dangerous experiment. but i the presumption that that presumption is that that shopping, materialism, consumerism and feminism of the availability of good education to men and women on an equal footing , which is, you know, not footing, which is, you know, not popular in islamic will resonate the traditionalism patriarchy the traditionalism patriarchy the you know the at home get pregnant and just go like this let's you know sort also i love
5:10 am
like in 50 years time of sharia law . yeah so the thing that does law. yeah so the thing that does bother me slightly is the extremist because i don't know if you remember this, but 2013 and 2014, there was group called the sharia project. i think . the sharia project. i think. they were and they were vigilantes who were literally patrolling sections of east london, trying to enforce islamic law on people in east london . and let me just london. and let me just underline right now, the muslim east london community. underline right now, the muslim east london community . we do not east london community. we do not appreciate this and that is the only thing that would concern. okay i registered wednesday's daily mail. have they got anything on this story. i can't it's completely passed on by the news, the daily mail don't have it in the front cover. they probably they probably had on yesterday i should imagine they got advance copy the census but instead running with the big the big threat to the nation from from them is apparently we're running out of turkeys and
5:11 am
turkey being the bird rather than the country. yeah so there's this avian flu that's been been tearing through christmas turkey the christmas turkey population particularly free range ones. so if you know middle class and you want a range turkey late, a good life, you're going to be in trouble and yeah it's halved the amount the amount available so would be turkeys from other countries . turkeys from other countries. yeah but is this one of those typical sort . the shops are typical sort. the shops are telling us that we're running out because they want us to buy it is a genuine it all. is there a genuine shortage like there has been this genuine problem with bird flu? actually affecting the flu? is actually affecting the turkeys and besides do do you still have turkey like prefer still have turkey like i prefer my favourite meal is my favourite christmas meal is a beef wellington. well that's useful to know my wife insisted the turkey and i always get bit annoyed because you know i know we all laugh about you know the cold leftovers fridge cold leftovers in the fridge but my there awful my goodness there is an awful lot get to as a rule. lot turkey to get to as a rule. but it feels like but i don't know it feels like the on an emergency the plot to on an emergency secret me what
5:12 am
secret service to me what you think scraping so think the scraping the barrel so all the james bones with turkey shortages like bluefield is eating them all and since that was all about some young beauties who were hypnotised and then released into the east anglian turkey farms. i'm for exactly how it turned out. you may be cutting them up or whatever things go, but i just can't believe avian flu is not avian is not called chicken pox. i would just make sense. three could good this might be something that can be fixed the previous story and this story might get together and fix each other because you know if islam becomes biggest religion we becomes the biggest religion we won't turkeys. no, won't need so many turkeys. no, that's will that's true. that will be another problem solve another problem that will solve itself in the itself everything does in the end also got half their end and also got half their front with the england front page with the england victory and a couple of traditional absolutely typical england fans on the front page there . young, blonde, perfect england fans on the front page there .mascara)londe, perfect england fans on the front page there .mascara andie, perfect england fans on the front page there .mascara and a, perfect england fans on the front page there .mascara and a marcus: teeth, mascara and a marcus rashford with his with his two girls. that is also covered on the mirror. diane yeah. bish rush bosh so it's very exciting.
5:13 am
and my whatsapp was blowing up dunng and my whatsapp was blowing up during the match . it was during the match. it was absolutely stupendous . had live absolutely stupendous. had live commentary from my mother and i had stats from my sister. did you actually watch it? well, i couldn't. i was i was reading this . i couldn't. i was i was reading this. i like it was like radio were filling me in on the way and it was great because when rashford scored the goal it was fabulous because my sister straight in with the stats wales has probability of winning has dropped to 1. so at one point it went down to 0.1. but that was because with that but then the problem is after like after a penod problem is after like after a period of time the text messages from my family stop because that's usually the time we used to go watch town football club play to go watch town football club play we go watch them play and we would go watch them like play and we would go watch them uke and play and we would go watch them like and that like every saturday and that usually time when like dad usually the time when like dad would in car, would be like, get in the car, we beat rush so that we want to beat the rush so that the stops sort with 15 the tech stops sort of with 15 minutes. to say, have minutes. i've got to say, i have didn't this match. sure didn't see this match. i'm sure , saw some of wales. i mean , i saw some of wales. i mean it's appearance in nearly
5:14 am
it's first appearance in nearly 60 know so fair 60 years, you know so fair enough haven't much but it's enough haven't had much but it's been of an isn't it, one been a bit of an isn't it, one way or another. and then i saw the figures do alone is the actual figures do alone is worth than their entire squad the welsh team so i mean you have to sort of say they did well even you know hang in there at all didn't they. i think we should we should have a uk team. so all best scottish players so all the best scottish players , irish , players, northern irish players , england wales players, the england wales certainly england, i certainly because england, i mean, scotland more distinct mean, scotland is more distinct in many i know where is. in many others. i know where is. i know. yeah. but it's not only it's more distinct. right. they had system. england had the whole system. england and need either a and wales, you need either a legal to play football legal contract to play football or a number of examples of england and wales being lumped together certain purposes. and i do i mean there a period back in the i think it was i guess it was the nineties was where where you had giggs. remember you had giggs. i can't remember which when it which ones were which when it was and hughes. was russian and hughes. but there point which they had there was a point which they had at least players who would at least five players who would have first england. at least five players who would have you first england. at least five players who would have you know, rst england. at least five players who would have you know, and ngland. at least five players who would have you know, and we and. at least five players who would have you know, and we would at least five players who would have in'ou know, and we would at least five players who would have in scotland and we would at least five players who would have in scotland never'e would at least five players who would
5:15 am
have in scotland never had>uld have in scotland never had any players so jordan players like that. so jordan right . joe wants to fly fly some right. joe wants to fly fly some of i saw such a so that was another the goalie i mean they'll say look from the 1930s. yeah no they were they eighties and nineties players fantastic a scotland you know i do think we could have it we could we could have it all you know, with, with, with rugby as well. i mean imagine that while we do have the think it the british lions, i think it would help country would also help the country stick we're all one stick together if we're all one thing. yeah yeah, he loved that. exactly what we need to he'll that's all for part one. in part two we will dig inside the papers, talk troubled papers, talk about troubled teams, . and if teams, troubled chinese. and if you a woman who would you were a woman who would prefer search from a or . whe prefer a strip search from a or. whe question . see you in a couple of question. see you in a couple of minutes .
5:18 am
welcome back to headliners. court is in session. i'm evans. this lot is still leo kearse and diane spencer relation. so let's papers wednesday's guardian now sounds like the government have been listening to gb news possibly even to leon no good can come of this . and of course can come of this. and of course this is about the uk minister defending the u—turn over removing harmful online content. absolutely there's a particular element to this bill that haven't been fond of on this show and that's the bit they're removing . think the right? yes removing. think the right? yes yes, yes. so want to remove offensive content that does not constitute a criminal offence. so comes under this banner of harmful but legal will because they don't want to include because they fear that it will
5:19 am
impose on free speech and i mean the bill is really good because better than having nothing the bill really good you've got the criminalising the encouragement i'd rather have nothing of nothing but but but this is the bit that i thought is going to trigger leo like the legal but harmful is stuff like where they glorify eating disorders because you think about how much of that is online you have the incredibly overweight weight and the incredibly under weight both doing their own thing where they go just eat what you want. everybody is beautiful but the cover of cosmopolitan it if that's your definition of it you know yeah healthy in any i mean this is the problem with the bill how do you how do you define legal harmful and you know it's harmful content they're going to say anything to glorify disorders glorify his eating disorders like somebody like you see you know somebody who's know who's who's overweight you know those those technically harmful because increased hypertension diabetes whatever so are they
5:20 am
are they it what about somebody who has extreme sports know paragliding or rock climbing those that's harmful it's not encouraging online harm it's nonsense. i mean the only way a website can really harm you is if it's the seed drive in your eye. so you can't harmed by looking at this stuff understand this i mean the culture secretary michelle donald and she has defended this change saying that the part of the impetus for it was this this woman go molly russell, who was influenced by things she saw on pinterest and so on, ended up taking a life and there there is a suggestion that young people can be exposed to very you know yes , keep your children off the yes, keep your children off the internet , your yes, keep your children off the internet, your children off yes, keep your children off the internet , your children off the internet, your children off the internet, your children off the internet, then nobody's going to be they're not going to be seeing this degeneracy on seeing all this degeneracy on tech know, not tech talk. you know, they're not going to be exposed to all this, you and stuff and you know, grooming and stuff and but itself would have but this bill itself would have put an onus on companies would have made the responsibility for the responsibility on companies
5:21 am
to remove harmful content. also private messages. so this would have been a huge leap forward. it have chinese it would have been a chinese scrutiny to do it, not the government. yeah, yeah. so yeah, but that's the thing like you see some of this can't be enforced , but they're trying to enforced, but they're trying to make it enforceable . like one of make it enforceable. like one of the parts of it is that they're trying to that companies will be fined something like ten or 20% if they knowingly are advertising to ten year olds when their website is for and above. but it's a bit like it's like a pub is in everybody's room, like how what is the way you can check ? but it was always you can check? but it was always the way with tobacco it wasn't it? i mean, in the in the bad old days of tobacco, the cigarette companies knew perfectly to perfectly well that the time to get when they're get kids hooked is when they're about 12. yeah. you know, and got product one way got the product to them one way or it was illegal or another. yeah. it was illegal . that was when . i mean, and that was when you had product deal had a physical product to deal with stuff with instead of just stuff that's gushing through the open portal of your smartphone. yeah, but claim this but i think they do claim this law still . penalise anyone
5:22 am
law will still. penalise anyone who is promoting material is intended to encourage you to your life because that is still that actually legal, illegal, harmful and illegal. yeah, but that's incitement to violence. so that comes under existing laws . that's true. wednesday's laws. that's true. wednesday's daily mail next leo an ungrateful mum is complaining students with access to free school for liverpool . that is school for liverpool. that is the way a lot of guardian would look. but a mother has hit out of the primary for teaching her eight year old daughter about masturbation and dreams . their masturbation and dreams. their daughter came home distressed in tears after she saw a video illustrating , an erection and illustrating, an erection and ejaculation . she said her ejaculation. she said her daughter was so upset. ejaculation. she said her daughter was so upset . the daughter was so upset. the graphic description of eight year old daughter illustrations focusing on things like this. we should not not natural. yeah not through and volcanoes but then these words i mean all right there's a volcano there is the
5:23 am
stuff like that a cartoon rocket launching with the words by my best mates is taking best mates daughter is taking engush best mates daughter is taking english history and geology as her a—levels . a rock so they her a—levels. a rock so they read the words in the video included horny sexual desires masturbation and erection. no if a child came into school and said oh my uncle or my stepdad has been seeing you know, talking about erections and masturbation that phone the social services get this this person investigated. why it okay when it's some you know blue haired schoolteacher with lady haired schoolteacher with a lady was gender and children i mean you probably know that my you know sentiment on your side you probably know that my you knowhat sentiment on your side you probably know that my you knowhat they ment on your side you probably know that my you knowhat they would>n your side you probably know that my you knowhat they would say)ur side you probably know that my you knowhat they would say is, side but what they would say is, i suppose only knowing these suppose only by knowing these words the year words with the eight year old for no. they had for a start no. when they had a dodgy uncle that's exactly what a see the excuse write a would see the excuse write them. yeah what i'm just, i'm just telling straight to what the judge should look out if they hear it in context of a classroom. does not enable them to then you know recognise when inappropriate sexual activity is going on around them. now this
5:24 am
is an interesting idea, but i would say that eight years old is , still too young. i think is, still too young. i think i really do think is i understand when they are a little older like they're at second second school that now making sense to me or or alternatively when they're very young when they're about three because they're surprisingly freud has things to say about this. i remember , son, say about this. i remember, son, it was it was bizarre really interested in. the school mum's when he was about three and then and then it went away again at five. so that would be an opportune possibly to get in. i'm kidding, folks, but no kidding entirely. i'm kidding, folks, but no kidding entirely . there is it. kidding entirely. there is it. there is a weird like a kind of foreshadowing of but anyway that is not an appropriate point for sex education. let's move on to wednesday time, given the stories covered so far this evening on this statistic , it evening on this statistic, it doesn't seem terribly surprising to . not as to me. no, not at all. as i we're looking at the times a quarter of older teens have a probable mental health disorder
5:25 am
. now this is interesting because the senior clinical lecturer in child public mental health at the university of exeter who's worked on the report seems to put a lot of this down to covid and seems to say that it's down to covid that these teenagers says there's been a massive rise. like in 2017, it was 10. but now in 2022, we're up to something like 25, which is obviously quite a jump. we have had the pandemic, however i do also question how much talking about mental has been put forward into the media. and so people are more likely to recognise when it is. i mean what for a teenager i have mental problems all the time. i know a single teenager that didn't . if i'm on it. yeah, it's didn't. if i'm on it. yeah, it's true. a terrible time. your true. it's a terrible time. your body apart. like, body is tearing apart. like, especially as a girl. like things start dropping and going sideways and you have no idea going on and it's just a bit of a all encompassing time where you're coming out into the world and. you're trying to fly away
5:26 am
from parents because from your parents because you want yeah. so from your parents because you visuppose yeah. so from your parents because you visuppose the yeah. so from your parents because you visuppose the is yeah. so from your parents because you visuppose the is it yeah. so from your parents because you visuppose the is it good’eah. so from your parents because you visuppose the is it good thingso i suppose the is it a good thing we recognise using it or we we recognise using it or are we encouraging people become obsessed the idea that they obsessed with the idea that they are there's are struggle like there's something them when in something wrong them when in reality there it just going through the kind of the weird that come it's just life that come with it's just life also there's an issue because of the amount of funding because obviously something like obviously this something like 2.3 billion amount of £2.3 billion, that's sort of going to this, which is don't get me wrong i think it's important that we look after our and young adults. no, no with my money not with leo's money, why don't we just get one to parents? anybody go out like a mum and dad any more. they can actually, do more. they can actually, you do this of this stuff for free instead of me government are going to me the government are going to step bodies. come step in and wipe bodies. come with uncle . so i'll with my money and uncle. so i'll say i've got loads of good uncles to too many, too many uncles to too many, too many uncles to too many, too many uncles to be honest with you. so uncles to be honest with you. so uncles have now been, you know, rendered that's what downs the other thing that's that could be
5:27 am
driving this if you get diagnosed with adhd or you know various other mental disorders which are real. i mean a lot of people could diagnosed i could get diagnosed adhd . a lot get diagnosed with adhd. a lot of friends have been of my friends have been diagnosed just get diagnosed with adhd just to get on drugs . and as you get on the drugs. and as you get older, basically chance older, it's basically any chance prescription speed . it's you prescription speed. it's you know, it's great. it's great. if want to get work done the same as mental illness. is it is a as a mental illness. is it is a mental illness. you know it's regarded as a neurological neuro atypical type a do or i don't. oh, my god i shouldn't live with that. so you don't try and cure that. so you don't try and cure that and we've got time for just one more and we're going to go to the times dying with a trans police oh word police officers. oh word arrested a lot. so i arrested quite a lot. so i imagine you've had something to this know. a shocking this. i know. what a shocking costing the stash is on my name. so lisa townsend who is part of the surrey constabulary, has said that it's not appropriate that trans police officers
5:28 am
search women. no and lisa has made a very definite sort of case here , said, look, if you case here, said, look, if you are recently police officer , so are recently police officer, so there is not necessarily outward signal that you are wishing to change your sex and your gender then don't in on strip searching women. now any police officer official who insists strip searching somebody already raises so alarm bells in my head. yeah but especially i mean if , you're head. yeah but especially i mean if, you're that head. yeah but especially i mean if , you're that worried about if, you're that worried about one of your colleagues. please could , you make a report or could, you make a report or something will blow some whistles . yeah, it's a it's whistles. yeah, it's a it's alarming. i'm sorry. like, i know that i could be easily labelled a tough because i'm saying this, but at the end of the day, you have to accept men are bigger. there are lot stronger transphobic . this is stronger transphobic. this is very offensive . women like me .
5:29 am
very offensive. women like me. would you say this is a slightly different question, but would you say the sexual orientation is an as well? because a lot of trans women who born male bodied trans women who born male bodied trans women. but still maintain a sexual in women, so they become lesbians. you know, it used to be a joke . i'm a lesbian used to be a joke. i'm a lesbian trapped in a man's body. used to be a joke. i'm a lesbian trapped in a man's body . and now trapped in a man's body. and now thatis trapped in a man's body. and now that is actually the case. yes. what does that make a difference as far as you're concerned as? well, far as i'm concerned, well, as far as i'm concerned, no because another no no, because it's another woman. she lived her woman. yeah she lived her experience and like she was, if she were in the trans as another well then why why why why anybody bothered about it. just let the beautiful real woman you for drugs or whatever they're going to find their car keys, number plate . what on earth can number plate. what on earth can you get up yourself. that's a shocking revelation. can't prefer to be strip searched live. well, i've done some research. well, i've done some research. well, i've done some research pornhub and i would
5:30 am
like i would like one on each end for this and i'd like a sort of elderly belgian detective . oh of elderly belgian detective. oh oh, you see? there we go. would you rather go with flora or marple? me marple. she's related . everyone should have a badge. they part two is done in the next section. the bbc bashed for being racist. yes being posh? yes and how dangerous can one of these be? we'll see you in a .
5:32 am
couple of welcome back to headline news. let's start this with wednesday's express earlier this chap has achieved one of you a lifetime ambition is schooling gary lineker a racist. i do most days on twitter , but gary days on twitter, but gary lineker is aware that he's called a racist . oh, same. and
5:33 am
called a racist. oh, same. and that's the hurt. so qatar's world cup chief hassan fouda has accused lineker of being prejudiced and racist against qatar's festival and said the bbc's coverage was racist so. they also, as well as gary lineker being racist that day, jurgen klinsmann talking to the bbc about their culture when he's talking about iran, he's a typical cheating, i believe that was the dodgy bit. yeah they said the claims klinsmann said that the germans. did you get my joke so as a typical german . oh joke so as a typical german. oh typical just being a bit racist yeah ironically. but on the other hand i your side isn't it. because you came out against the iranians and got in trouble. victoria, was the victoria, that was the government oh that was the government. talking government. so he was talking about the football and culture. but i mean he said iranian but yeah i mean he said iranian there was some heard and some of his was iranian for his name was iranian for ungrateful. right . ungrateful. yeah, that's right. doesn't mean a gary doesn't mean he's a gary marshall whatever she called. yeah the bbc clip , the yeah but you the bbc clip, the bbc might as well.
5:34 am
yeah but you the bbc clip, the bbc might as well . the bbc is bbc might as well. the bbc is very racist . i bbc might as well. the bbc is very racist. i mean, if only there was another news channel. you could watch that isn't racist. well, unfortunately have quite as much qatar world cup footage, unfortunately, as the bbc have you . yeah. we have got bbc have you. yeah. we have got diane's family. bbc have you. yeah. we have got diane's family . keep us up to diane's family. keep us up to date via text . well, what do you date via text. well, what do you think was the bbc got a to answer here they do actually because they did not show the opening ceremony of the games and i have an issue with that because you are a the national we all have to chip into your pot so i want to see the opening ceremony and i can choose whether i want to watch it or not. you don't get dictate whether i watch it or not because you're the bbc . i'm because you're the bbc. i'm sorry, but that's not on. they should have showed the opening ceremony, to be fair. mean, if ceremony, to be fair. i mean, if the is with like human the issue is with like human rights or whatever. they rights abuses or whatever. they were happy with 2008 were quite happy with the 2008 beijing said beijing olympics when they said that, how russia the that, which is how russia the russian football or whatever it well onto times diane this
5:35 am
well onto the times diane this story seems designed with devil ish ingenuity to drive a wedge between . you and leo, i couldn't between. you and leo, i couldn't possibly right now. so in the times quote posh six truths in bbc accent so apparently it's that there's this whole argument because amal rajan who has a self accent and this on the world at one apparently has criticised the bbc for a lack of diversity because it suggested 70% of newsreader spoke with their state pronunciation compared with 3% of the british population . now here's the population. now here's the question that they were trying to raise you need to be understood . yeah. when you talk understood. yeah. when you talk now i don't know if that's necessarily true because sometimes i have watched people on the bbc and i have not understood what they're saying and i've literally had to put the subtitles on right . so you the subtitles on right. so you saying it's not true . you do saying it's not true. you do need to be able to and i think
5:36 am
you should be able to be understood. i hate when i say understood. i hate it when i say what they shouldn't what you mean. they shouldn't doesn't are doesn't employ people who are capable understood capable of being understood sometimes and they sometimes they don't and they employ people and they stand and they sort of talk. and i think how have you got this job? because i can't actually understand what you're saying he's had a regional accent, usually due to just anything it could really it could be a really thick regional accent that's so thick like they're even dropping in slang words. you think, okay , lost this, i've you think, okay, lost this, i've lost this. can you name names of these presenters? amol rajan no, i don't . what is the south i don't. what is the south london accent? oh who would know all real well ? that's right. all real well? that's right. amol rajan is the new host of university challenge. he has been accused of up just about i mean, he hosts the today programme, which is also where turton sort of made most of his now host well one i think it's called the lunchtime he is probably sort of old fashioned pubuc probably sort of old fashioned public school. but i remember this argument 40 years ago, my dad defending received
5:37 am
pronunciation as being universally understood. yeah, yeah, nobody talks that yeah, sure. nobody talks that celia johnson in in the brief encounter . that's about the only encounter. that's about the only person who ever actually spoke that, you know, outside of the news but it was just it was cupped news but it was just it was clipped content and all sort of. yeah the words were and let's listen. listening to radio for growing up in scotland i didn't feel by the by the feel alienated by the by the accents i mean what i've noticed of in england is a lot of of living in england is a lot of engush of living in england is a lot of english people sort of work and classify their accents. they talk more like guy ritchie. guy ritchie grew up in like a 40 bedroom and elton ben. elton yeah. jeremy corbyn it was known 20 years ago as mocked me that's come and gone but that was that was the term and then was the actual real accent which is jamie different jamie oliver slightly different with the right where you with the stop right where you don't pronounce the g in the middle of the word which is middle of the word glo which is and includes a glow. you just sort of gulp it sort like talking like a an essex lizard .
5:38 am
talking like a an essex lizard. and there have been all these variations , people attempting to variations, people attempting to conceal. yeah their it's in their education is it because you you like for example the that i taught i like moved around a lot when i was younger so i don't have any particular accent. i mean, when i get drunk can definitely tell. i spent a long time in the west country, but that. it's but apart that. yeah but it's just because i moved around a bit by all rights accent should be so we should have a sort be from so we should have a sort of like a platonic system in the in the republic where you identify who are going to be tomorrow's future broadcasters and make up you know and then you make up you know they sort procession they, have a sort of procession through country they spend through the country they spend six months on the square around town like work . let's head to town like work. let's head to wednesdays mail now . it's been a wednesdays mail now. it's been a long time coming, but it looks like twitter's dirty little secret sorry about. oh, yeah, this is going to be fantastic. can't wait. so elon musk who bought recently said said twitter we've been releasing files on its own free speech suppression and a tweet so he's
5:39 am
reference there's lots of suppression of free speech and in particular particular conservative voices on twitter or there has been up until elon musk took over these specifically twitter's 2020 censorship of the new york post on hunter biden's laptop . this on hunter biden's laptop. this was apparently in collusion , the was apparently in collusion, the democrat party. this is really stuff colluding with with the political party before an election to suppress a valid story and an established legitimate newspaper. and so it was it was delisted from his blog from it was blocked from other social media as well the lesson from the to try and swing the election to influence an election and that's i mean that's got to be that's going to be a criminal thing do so hopefully going to we're hopefully we're going to we're going some people going to see some people actually going to jail over this because this this is something when people about when people talk about the election know election being stolen you know they get laughed out because they get laughed out because they oh know there weren't they think oh know there weren't falsified but it's stuff falsified votes but it's stuff like this, you this this like this, you know, this this legitimate story hunter biden's laptop the future
5:40 am
laptop pictures of the future president sun and you know smoking crack and with prostitutes and all the rest of it and doing dodgy business on behalf of his father that could really have swayed the election. there's also another issue regarding twitter and censorship . apple have apparently threatened to withhold twitter from their app store , which is from their app store, which is which is really , really dodgy which is really, really dodgy considering . apple also colluded considering. apple also colluded with the chinese government to stop protesters sending messages and communicating with each other. and twitter . apple also other. and twitter. apple also lobbied the us government to stop legislate action that would have prevented apple using slave labour in. china. so apple aren't you know friends of freedom and, democracy and liberalism ? they are friends of liberalism? they are friends of authority in regimes and they want to they want to bring to the west. i'm surprised , have to the west. i'm surprised, have to say that twitter didn't delete all those files when they knew they just love us maybe suddenly stuff syndrome is just simply illegal. do you think building
5:41 am
the stasi , the berlin wall fell? the stasi, the berlin wall fell? you know, the shredders melted. exactly. death of stalin exactly. the death of stalin stuff. i don't know. how do you feel about this am maybe slightly enthusiastic. no, slightly less enthusiastic. no, no. following this no. i have been following this quite it's very quite and i think it's very interesting if does interesting because if he does release this and, maybe release all of this and, maybe there is a case to answer in the course there are going to course then there are going to be people only be a group of people who only have fired or just have been either fired orjust locked or whatever, but may locked out or whatever, but may now criminal prosecution. now face criminal prosecution. and at the moment, i would say that the majority possibly the majority of who i've seen interact seem to be all the twitter people we loved, where we worked and all this stuff. but this kind of collusion because , it really was a because, it really was a fascinating story of how this silly man, hunter biden, left his laptop and is it possible you could certainly make the case that one should not decide who's going to be the next based on his son's , you know, criminal on his son's, you know, criminal activity. and he certainly was. but but not allowing the american to play that is that's
5:42 am
an entirely yeah yeah she's what always brings him down isn't it it's the same with like clinton he was i mean he wasn't all about his presidency. but the problem had the problem wasn't that he'd had the affair. he'd lied affair. it was that he'd lied about that about it. it's always that question. cover question. it's always the cover up will see the up that him well we will see the telegraph now for those of us who don't fancy masking and who don't fancy masking up and ruining romantic meal ruining someone's romantic meal for chief actually for two and chief actually orders a board game version of that sort of activity. oh gosh this is this is such a great so a board game that encourages attracts on tax on leftists shelved french retailers so antifa the game had been on sale at ethnic retail stores for the past month an early version out onune past month an early version out online and it encourages right okay written the front it says racism sexism nationalism that's enoughi racism sexism nationalism that's enough i mean you know catastrophe yeah so what do you say oh they just ordered it it's
5:43 am
against far right. it's your turn to play so it they say it's game to raise awareness about dimensions of activism you know so technically there should be a bit where you throw super painting or you glue yourself the floor so are you buying today this or you beat up on tifa. yeah yeah. but i bet can get to larp as a fascist mob instead of a homework out all. the players and tifa or some them. so there's none of them are like boys that would make it much more okay with like pick a side. so the game itself is the right wing and you are always the antifa, you have the right way. yeah even call of duty lazy play way. yeah even call of duty lazy play is the other side. oh here we make a choice. would you like to square one block a university to square one block a university t to beat up a to square one block a university tto beat up a right to square one block a university t to beat up a right wing tto beat up a right wing militant three. well, actually , militant three. well, actually, then try attack a national rally
5:44 am
for throw a petrol bomb the police this is fringe 24 they probably are a bit tougher than the portland guys. yeah you know because they're the spots on wheat cards they did actually smash the place up once upon a time, the thing with this time, but the thing with this is you there you know, fascist. i mean, there aren't really that many fascists anymore . and what see is anymore. and what we see is people legitimate concern people with legitimate concern or ukraine legit to me except, you know, the eyes of a big supporter of the eyes of battalions and let's not pretend they have not seen signal battalions and let's not pretend theover have not seen signal battalions and let's not pretend theover themfe not seen signal battalions and let's not pretend theover them but)t seen signal battalions and let's not pretend theover them but yeahen signal battalions and let's not pretend theover them but yeah likegnal all over them but yeah like legitimate legitimate legitimate people legitimate concerns over over or whatever it is or size of the state or whatever are dismissed covered the covid look, things are dismissed as fascist or dismissed as fascist or dismissed as fascist or dismissed as far extremists. we've seen this over and over again sadiq khan is go to think to dismiss a political opponent is i'm not i'm not talking to them they're they're a far right extremist and it's an absolute nonsense right nonsense they're not a far right extremist not historical standards . well so it's exactly standards. well so it's exactly what must quit, isn't it? what they must quit, isn't it? exactly. yeah. so it's a way to
5:45 am
dehumanise people , so to then dehumanise people, so to then legitimise attacks against them, which is what a which ironically is what a fascist do and then entrench that a book. it's that in the form of a book. it's an straight out of the an absolute straight out of the monopoly playbook. part three is in bag in final section in the bag in the final section we've links. a and we've got protected links. a and cheese court case and find out why. if you're cabin crew going to need one of these they get .
5:47 am
welcome back to the final part of headliners. let's kick off with wednesday his daily mail. diane, in the wake of woeful showing against england, this just what the welsh need to restore their national pride . restore their national pride. yes well a leak has been given the same protected status as cornish pasties , melton mowbray, cornish pasties, melton mowbray, pork pies , stilton cheese. it's pork pies, stilton cheese. it's been a war did the welsh leak
5:48 am
has been awarded protected geographical in status by the government so they're saying that it's an iconic emblem of wales they're saying that they wear the leeks because they are lucky they wear them at sporting events . they didn't wear many events. they didn't wear many tonight . we're still allowed to tonight. we're still allowed to grow . oh, yes . you may not say grow. oh, yes. you may not say that they are welsh leeks. can you say the method welsh? right. the champagne method champion? no, no . we like a different no, no. we like a different totally name to leeks. yeah particularly . i mean it doesn't particularly. i mean it doesn't i don't, i don't . i get the i don't, i don't. i get the melton mowbray thing that like people go, oh yeah, that's a real pork pie from melton and stilton . clearly it's in the stilton. clearly it's in the name. it comes from . it's not name. it comes from. it's not just blue cheese, but aren't just a blue cheese, but aren't just a blue cheese, but aren't just a blue cheese, but aren't just a vegetable, aren't they i mean, that's not people don't go all these real welsh links i've never anyone. never heard anyone. yeah no nobody cares nobody cares if the leek welsh nobody's going leek is welsh nobody's going there the shops we all kind there in the shops we all kind of reason to at me if of these reason to at me if i say i have these non welsh at my
5:49 am
party it's an absolute absolute nonsense. are they different. they're 40% of the top is flag. it's the green . so they all get it's the green. so they all get it. yes. just a leak. yeah they know. apparently that's 40% and other leaks are not the 40. so this welsh 23 get more leek for your more edible part. well, some of these is something i really don't know . it's that really don't know. it's that because there's always a little dirt in. yeah, there's always there's always dirt. you get the dirt too you probably know. but at least you get your dog to eat that out. that's why you're talking a leaf. and she mustn't do that allium is bad for dogs bad joke. oh and leave it sounds at least one airline has grasped what most passengers want from their air crew. and it isn't gender neutral self—empowerment, is it ? exactly. so air india has is it? exactly. so air india has outlawed lord grey hair, bald patches , receding hair lines for patches, receding hair lines for cabin and it's updated staff
5:50 am
guidelines . cabin and it's updated staff guidelines. the rules cabin and it's updated staff guidelines . the rules also cabin and it's updated staff guidelines. the rules also apply when staff are travelling in their own time. you get on a plane incognito . you know what plane incognito. you know what it's like being at school. it's still representative, still got to wear the uniform . yeah, it's to wear the uniform. yeah, it's mud. i've found it quite . they mud. i've found it quite. they don't mind. they won't sack you if you get a bull patch, but they insist you absolutely shave your head smooth . well, if the your head smooth. well, if the stress of the stress of the job makes you bald , then vicariously makes you bald, then vicariously liable your bald patch that they're then punishing you for. well, but it's quite well, i guess but it's quite that regard completely that they regard a completely smooth bald head as being like what i've got would be would not be acceptable. well, this is i think what they're talking about. it's kind of like cause friction the slide. friction going down the slide. yeah that yeah. get yeah that might yeah. you get slapped . i'm quite like the fact slapped. i'm quite like the fact that they have some standards so what do you think . it's what do you think. it's interesting because this is new actually a lot of airlines they always have like rules about bmi, especially bmi and well,
5:51 am
qatar airlines came under fire from this because . they will from this because. they will only make their uniforms for women certain sizes and don't fit the uniform. you better stop eating until do that's based and i don't know whether that's down sort of fuel costs or the fact that you don't want to necessarily be sort of elbow indulged by people as they walk down the aisle. you've got to fit down the aisle, you have got to fit down the aisle. yes. and also, to strap in the also, you've got to strap in the little with for little seat with the tail for next i wonder if they next to. yeah. i wonder if they sell of refreshments from sell more of refreshments from attractive staff as nobody wants attractive staff as nobody wants a talk from a bald person . bald a talk from a bald person. bald greying man . oh mirror. now and greying man. oh mirror. now and florida woman is taking things too literally . oh, right. okay too literally. oh, right. okay now this story does have a little bit of something in it that do like it. so in the mirror a woman sues macaroni and cheese company saying it takes longer to than advertised. okay now we all know in a pepsi
5:52 am
harriet jet situation here so the appetiser says that it's ready in three and a half minutes and her is claiming this is false and misleading it does not include the full steps required to the pasta so . you required to the pasta so. you have to remove the lid in the sauce pouch. add water micro , sauce pouch. add water micro, wave and stir it . right, right. wave and stir it. right, right. and what does the three and a half minutes is just a microwave that's literally i'm assume it's just the microwave time. yeah. so on one i think this is so on one hand i think this is ridiculous and. she's asking for $5 million, which i think is just ridiculous is straight out of donald's art of deal though. yeah. yeah that's they call anchoring . yeah so she's not anchoring. yeah so she's not going to get a job in air india. she can wait three and a half minutes to shovel a tub of macaroni in her to . face it macaroni in her to. face it she's not going to fit down that aisle. what is that? the rest of it is opening the packet. yeah. i sauce and you i think the sauce pouch and you got the water now but the thing
5:53 am
always pouch . i think that might always pouch. i think that might be my new nickname for icm but it's she can we are in the spirit there is an issue though because . yeah this is to do with because. yeah this is to do with advertising the actual production like the fox act of your interaction with product. and there is a fact that are stating the fact is that it will take you three and a half minutes. now, i don't she deserves $5 million, but do i think the company actually think that the company actually all wrong ? well, yes, they all wrong? well, yes, they should probably have a symbol like like a little lamb with with a lightning flash through it or something when they on the packet to say this is how long will take to make this is the microwave element the rest and then could understood this is then it could understood this is like microwave time three and a half minutes obviously if you're fumbling the sauce pouch for half a minute, we can't be responsible for your own use and what is she's really bad at
5:54 am
sauce pouches. yeah. and like when you like make a lemon cake, for example, if said, oh, lemon cake only takes a 50 minutes. yeah, rubbish you go to zesty lemon, you've obsessed three lemon, you've got obsessed three lemon. that can be a whole afternoon, right? funding disaster disaster wednesday star and the discover of a rare mythical being washington dc is it an honest politician? leah no, it's a woman who's been confirmed to be her daughter , confirmed to be her daughter, mother and uncle and a mind blowing discovery. this wasn't in norfolk or dumfries . this, in norfolk or dumfries. this, yeah. this was in washington, d.c. so is kim. kim tourism chimaera . yeah, but the chimaera. yeah, but the guimaraes camera is cameras. yeah. so it occurs when genes a vanishing twin. so a twin brother, fertile with almost a fossil dissolves in just dna, sort of some the gong completely dissolve and you like a weird like sisters growing and teeth and stuff like that it's absolutely of like a siamese what we used to call a twin.
5:55 am
that's probably not right anymore. it's an conjoined twin, but kind of it's like that. but be kind of it's like that. except conjoined is almost except the conjoined is almost disappeared entirely . you've but disappeared entirely. you've but it's genetics have gone into into this person so yeah she's our daughter's mother which you'd expect somebody to be the right off back is on the wikipedia page and it pretty rare but the one the most common source of it be after after the disappearance twin is if you get a bone marrow transfer . oh, a bone marrow transfer. oh, right. wow. and the bone marrow. the dna from the from the donor will sometimes then kind of get into your blood system generally. and you have and then some of them are. so you can actually serve your dna you can continue on through a bone marrow . this is the big question marrow. this is the big question is it's possible that the full hermaphrodite in nature capable capable of cell fertilisation but it's never been discovered a human being but in theory you could still fertilise because i've tried it i know we've all tried we all you have that here. i don't know , lewis. no, i was
5:56 am
i don't know, lewis. no, i was just joking. simon what are you talking about ? just joking. simon what are you talking about? but just joking. simon what are you talking about ? but there just joking. simon what are you talking about? but there is there in theory, there are some of them. sometimes they have sets of sexual organs and all this, you there is the puzzle even to or maybe you even if it were to or maybe you would be in vitro, you know, there would a sort of outside there would be a sort of outside and then back again, say you don't fertilisation don't do that. so fertilisation no, no. i mean, i've avoided fertilisation at all costs throughout life. maybe that's why if you never found perfect for he was in you all alone anyway, that's all we have time for thank you to my guests. it's been a pleasure discussing . you been a pleasure discussing. you know the ways of the world and, the causes of misery . leo will the causes of misery. leo will be back tomorrow. i will be back. tomorrow will be joined by nate dixon and diane will be at home fertilising . let me start home fertilising. let me start this despite the fact that you have a one man i'm going to be a
6:00 am
the england knock wales at the world cup with a decisive nil victory . good morning. at 6:00 on wednesday, the 30th of november. this is breakfast on gb news with isabel and martin daubney here in news this morning. helping guess yes england are through to knockout stage of the world cup securing a three nil victory in their final group stage match. two goals from marcus rashford saw the three lions win comfortably over wales who were now out the tournament. and as you know and you know is
9 Views
IN COLLECTIONS
TV-GBN Television Archive Television Archive News Search ServiceUploaded by TV Archive on