tv Mark Dolan Tonight GB News December 9, 2022 8:00pm-11:01pm GMT
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it's friday nights. it's outside. shall we have some .7 outside. shall we have some.7 welcome to mark dolan tonight now starts at the early time of 8 pm. we kick off with an hour of lively debates , some of lively debates, some entertainment along the way . entertainment along the way. could it.7 richard tice and reform uk cost tories the next election i'm joined by former ukip godfrey bloom , legendary ukip godfrey bloom, legendary broadcaster and michael crick is joining me in the studio to talk about keir starmer. it inevitable that he'll be our next prime minister. is he really britain's alternative and danielle lloyd super wag will be joining us towards the end of
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the hour talking about shocking story england player raheem sterling, whose family were whilst he was away . just what do whilst he was away. just what do the wives and girlfriend go through lots to get through. but first with me the 3 hours, it's all brilliant tatiana sanchez . all brilliant tatiana sanchez. marc thank you very much. this is the latest from. the gb newsroom, a child with a suspected case of strep a has died in sussex, bringing the total number of deaths in the uk total number of deaths in the uk to 16. the uk security agency confirmed . the child was a confirmed. the child was a student at hove park school. it says its with brighton and hove city council as well as a school to raise awareness of the signs symptoms . thousands royal to raise awareness of the signs symptoms. thousands royal mail staff have walked off the job in a new wave of strikes . more than a new wave of strikes. more than 115,000 workers rallied outside parliament demanding better pay and. members of the workers
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union will again on sunday with action planned throughout the including christmas eve. the prime minister says the government is looking at tough new laws to help minimise. government is looking at tough new laws to help minimise . the new laws to help minimise. the chancellor has announced to overhaul the financial , pledging overhaul the financial, pledging to review and replace hundreds of pages eu regulations. dubbed the edinburgh reforms jeremy hunt says brexit has provided a opportunity to reshape the rules. more than 30 regulatory changes have been unveiled, including revising some measures introduced following the 2008 financial crash . banks have financial crash. banks have become much healthier financially since 2008. we put in place a process so that financial issues can be resolved, which we didn't have before . but on that basis we before. but on that basis we also want to make sure they can compete with other financial centres, whether it's the united states or asia . and scotland is
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states or asia. and scotland is in fantastic place to do that and that's why these reforms will make a big difference . a will make a big difference. a fuel poverty charity is warning the rising cost living and cold weather will leave struggling this winter. national energy action says people are facing a choice of either living in unheated homes or up debt. it comes as the uk health security agency has issued a cold weather alert for england with temperatures predicted to drop to as low as minus ten . the met to as low as minus ten. the met office is warning up to four inches of snow could fall in london and the south—east this weekend and have been knocked out of the cup losing on penalties to croatia . supporters penalties to croatia. supporters in zagreb have jumped forjoy as their team in zagreb have jumped forjoy as theirteam reached in zagreb have jumped forjoy as their team reached the semi—finals. they'll now face the winner of tonight's game with the netherlands facing argentina at the moment. meanwhile, england are preparing to face reigning champions france tomorrow . captain harry
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france tomorrow. captain harry kane says , his team are kane says, his team are determined to win into this tournament , determined to win into this tournament, hoping to determined to win into this tournament , hoping to believe tournament, hoping to believe that we can win it. and we've got to a stage now where we expect it to be and now is about trying to push on and. we face a really game tomorrow, but i know everyone's ready. we've prepared and we will go into that game with . yeah maybe more belief with. yeah maybe more belief what we did back in 2018 . tv what we did back in 2018. tv onune what we did back in 2018. tv online and the 80 plus radio this is gb news. now it's back to mark dolan tonight . to mark dolan tonight. many thanks, tatiana. we'll see you in an hour's time. welcome to market tonight, which now starts at the earlier time of 8 pm. right through until we kick p.m. right through until we kick off with an of lively debate and some fun along the way could it
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richard tice and reform uk cost the tories next election. i'll be asking no holds barred deliciously un—pc political commentator godfrey, bloom and is not pulling his punches is sir keir starmer the best alternative for.7 britain. we'll put that to legend tory television journalist and investor , active reporter investor, active reporter michael crick , who's live in the michael crick, who's live in the studio and as raheem sterling returns to the world cup following the burglary to his family , we'll speak to reality family, we'll speak to reality star and super wag danielle lloyd , just what do the wife and lloyd, just what do the wife and girlfriends go through when their husband is away .7 but let's their husband is away? but let's kick off as always do on friday at this with my highlights from . gb news over the last seven days, it's time for my clips of the week . dan is the jewel in the week. dan is the jewel in the week. dan is the jewel in the of this place and what i
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love about his show is no spin no bias and no censorship. that's right no spin no bias , no that's right no spin no bias, no censorship. he is the king of neutrality. take a listen to this perfect example of dan being very balanced in relation to harry and meghan and then new documentary series an act of treachery against their own flesh and blood, the institution of the monarchy our late great queen elizabeth . second, the queen elizabeth. second, the united kingdom , the british united kingdom, the british pubuc united kingdom, the british public and even even the . public and even even the. commonwealth we had a very vague dan, it's ambiguous. it's vanilla what do you really think ? yep. the duke and duchess of delusion went for the jugular . delusion went for the jugular. the disgraceful first three episodes of their netflix reality show. take immediate and dirty hollywood to pursue a deranged attack on their enemies . i enjoyed that , dan, but at
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. i enjoyed that, dan, but at some point you're going to get off that fence . now, i love our off that fence. now, i love our team of there around . the team of there around. the country representing the whole of britain. they're best in the industry and delightful jeff moody support himself with this audition for ramsay's kitchen nightmares . audition for ramsay's kitchen nightmares. straight back audition for ramsay's kitchen nightmares . straight back back audition for ramsay's kitchen nightmares. straight back back . nightmares. straight back back. coming up, we hope. what a wonderful group of really heart . i've heard . how are you? you . i've heard. how are you? you okay? i'm really hot . oh oh, oh, okay? i'm really hot. oh oh, oh, blimey. now me tell you that i know jeff moody very well. let me tell you . not the worst thing me tell you. not the worst thing he's had in his mouth. me tell you. not the worst thing he's had in his mouth . the team he's had in his mouth. the team on headline headliners our late night newspaper reviews show are nothing if not fully informed. here is the comedian and presenter josh here is the comedian and presenterjosh howie showing how useful he'd be next to alan
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shearer and rio ferdinand on match the day. oh, look, they got a lot of news. there's something at the bottom here. sterling may rejoin three lions in qatar. i think that's with the currency markets. okay. possibly well, let's not focus on. that's boring . josh possibly well, let's not focus on. that's boring .josh howie on. that's boring. josh howie for england managed . meanwhile, for england managed. meanwhile, husband and wife partners pip, esther and phil smashed this morning as ever on their highly watchable friday mid—morning show, where a couple of guests a couple of guests gave the naked truth . some of you who are eagle truth. some of you who are eagle eyed will have noticed andrew gilligan and nick timothy have left . and joining us now is left. and joining us now is nature's and wife helen and simon. very much so. i have say my first thought, if you don't mind me , was blooming. it's mind me, was blooming. it's freezing outside. wouldn't it be the time to close? shouldn't naturism seasonal ? what a the time to close? shouldn't naturism seasonal? what a pair of . but i did naturism seasonal? what a pair
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of. but i did like naturism seasonal? what a pair of . but i did like the naturism seasonal? what a pair of. but i did like the naturists . ooh . meanwhile is one of the . ooh. meanwhile is one of the most skilled inquisitor was on the channel but he drew the short straw when he given this guest. take a look . all right, guest. take a look. all right, steve. i'll just you again. it's not become a little drink of water or i might look to be on a tv. steve, just this joke from steve to be honest with you, it's a bit weird. this may i'm just asking you whether time itself our romance has links to the communist your ridiculous why is he asking to patrick a joke. i mean imagine someone who's a comedian on gb news on this channel we condemn anti—semitism and, all forms of racism and equivocate. however, there's no accounting for some of our guests , like commentator of our guests, like commentator lewis . on the subject of , rapper lewis. on the subject of, rapper kanye west , because he was so
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kanye west, because he was so extreme erm and these beliefs that they, they were exposed as being distasteful for people. yeah. so that it can't. everybody hates the jews . i hate everybody hates the jews. i hate the jews. everybody hates . i the jews. everybody hates. i should just add the here that lewis, lewis is jewish , lewis is lewis, lewis is jewish, lewis is jewish. yeah. and and it's not true lewis that everyone hates jews. i don't hate the jews. well something the matter with you?i well something the matter with you? i mean lewis is doing it to get . counsel crazy stuff. well, get. counsel crazy stuff. well, lewis rightly drew criticism and for his terrible comments, although that said, he's getting although that said, he's getting a new fanbase among jeremy corbyn's supporters as we can , corbyn's supporters as we can, staying with lewis schaffer, who think is going to become eclipse of week regular and the debates around a once musician being played christmas. take a look a item of this week is from greg . item of this week is from greg. greg has said, is it wrong ? but greg has said, is it wrong? but i think it's about time gary glitters and roll christmas is
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allowed to be added to christmas playlists . lewis it is a catchy playlists. lewis it is a catchy tune, is it not? i guess it's not that big in america, but oh yeah. but then america doesn't have as many as is. this country has . oh well, at least that's has. oh well, at least that's something that we're good at. britain's got more makes you proud . now folks if you have proud. now folks if you have spotted a clip on gb news that you think is worthy of clips of the week, then why didn't you drop me a line? please the email clips of the week it could be dan wootton. it could be dubois. it could be nigel. it could patrick. you name it. i want to keep your eyes peeled for a potential comedy gold. it could be a funny clip or , a be a funny clip or, a controversial clip, or one that simply worthy of comment . simply worthy of comment. mark@gbnews.uk clips of the week do you stay touch with that? in fact, i might even a name check out to any eagle eyed viewers that can send gold our way.
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out to any eagle eyed viewers that can send gold our way . well that can send gold our way. well done to carl and joe's the that excellent selection of gb news hits and by the way if you're enjoying the channel tell your friends tell your family and let's change the world together . lots to get through in the next 3 hours because martin dolan tonight happens at 8:00 every friday and saturday and. that's eight till 11. and of course from nine on sunday tonight we've got the wonderfully unhappy see godfrey bloom he's he'll be talking about whether tice and the reform uk can actually the tories the next election . tories the next election. michael crick is in the studio legend political broadcaster and reporter is keir starmer really the best alternative for? britain and very excited about this. at 10:00 may mark meets guest is the that literally broke the bank. nick leeson guest is the that literally broke the bank . nick leeson live broke the bank. nick leeson live in the studio so we'll get to all of that plus your emails plus my wonderful panel and the papers and maybe some more in
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against 52% of the country. that ruins their friendship . they've ruins their friendship. they've lost people who would have embraced him. it was about what? but i have a piece, of course, as well. what i took away from it is, an important 5 seconds, what i away from it was this. it isn't all making for me. it
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looks like it is making me brainwashed. looks like it is making me we heard that my sister said no. similarly with this, i just recently found out, you know, it's really sad because ashley and i were on talking terms. we were i thought , and i were on talking terms. we were i thought, bonding after not speaking for a while, even though we did speak not speaking for a while, even know that there are huge problems and huge horrors within the empire story, but it feels very slanted how they've characterised it. yes and i mean, trying to equate to mix it with brexit, you know, i think that the whole tone is set by the disclaimer at the front
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saying we ask for comment in two. it's mark dolan tonight starting at the earlier time of pm every friday and, saturday at ten. my mark meets guest is nick leeson , the man who quite literally broke the bank. he broke down, brought down the barings bank. he'll tell amazing story at ten. and don't forget, after. we've also got my take at ten nine. it's the opinion we've got my panel it's the opinion we've got my panel, the papers. and in the big question is meghan markle bonkers . we'll be asking bonkers. we'll be asking america's top psychiatrist . but america's top psychiatrist. but labour may lead the tories in the polls at the moment. but is the polls at the moment. but is the greatest threat to rishi sunak. the greatest threat to rishi sunak . his hopes of re—election sunak. his hopes of re—election . richard tice and the reform uk party could . he split votes on party could. he split votes on the right gift number ten to labour to debate this. i'm
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delighted welcome former mep and commentator godfrey bloom hello godfrey. hello good evening to you . is there godfrey. hello good evening to you. is there a godfrey. hello good evening to you . is there a danger that rich you. is there a danger that rich tice is so successful diluting the conservative? he hands the keys to keir starmer, which is bad news . everyone on the right bad news. everyone on the right . well i do forgive me for suggesting that. political punditry generally in this country comes from london and the south—east of england who really don't understand anything , which is why they keep on getting their political punditry wrong. desperately wrong. i was a founder of ukip and. it was quite clear always from the very beginning that the votes that we were taking weren't from necessarily from disaffected conservatives, but from what would be you and i might know, is old labour the danger of reform if they get their act together? i'm not sure that they have is from old labour. labour. in
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team i had was my mother in law who was a disaffected victoria mate from the rugby club and dog the border collie . and we went the border collie. and we went from 2003 and the election in 2014, the european elections got 450,000 votes . they won because 450,000 votes. they won because of the votes mark. nobody in yorkshire votes conservative except in one or two in three constituencies. they were old laboun constituencies. they were old labour, massive, old labour. they were voting for ukip me in huge numbers . so the danger huge numbers. so the danger actually of reform, if they get their act together is not to the conservatives per say oh, they will get does tories. of course they will, because the tories are so bad it's the whole working class office in this country who are polluting , country who are polluting, clean, homeless and can't vote. but yes another idiot . what's but yes another idiot. what's the difference between ? sunak
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the difference between? sunak and starmer? what's difference? and if people came out of london and visited the pubs and, talked in the pubs, people would you what's the difference and that's the gameplan . it's an open goal the gameplan. it's an open goal for reform if they get it right, but i'm not sure they're getting it right. well that's what i want to ask you because , as part want to ask you because, as part of ukip, you mentioned you are you are a founding member of ukip. you are former nigel farage quite literally changed the landscape of british politics really. he changed our constitution by helping to get brexit across the line. it would never have without nigel has richard tice got the chops to deliver that kind of transformation within westminster is he is he the gift as he got nigel's talents is he charismatic is he the man to do it ? look richard tice clearly is it? look richard tice clearly is a very guy whose heart is in the right place. nigel had charisma
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. but don't forget at the beginning he wasn't leader of ukip. he didn't become the leader of ukip until a bit later . we must remember that . and of . we must remember that. and of course, nigel did a fantastic job of putting on the map. it was already moving and he moved it further and further forward and that's great. and you need somebody with charisma to do that. but of course nigel is slightly marmite figure as indeedi slightly marmite figure as indeed i am myself . a lot of indeed i am myself. a lot of people love him. a lot of people him. but that doesn't matter in politics if you're trying to be the pivot of moving things around but what i think richard tice in the reform party have to do is to be have a lot have to be a lot more brazen it now nigel and i who , i ran things nigel and i who, i ran things mainly in the north of england admittedly, but he ran the party from the south of england . that from the south of england. that was good and it was successful and got all what we wanted. we got, that, that was good. but you have to be quite focussed in a and don't that the reform
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a and i don't that the reform party have that in their manifesto there's a couple things that they need to do which i think actually swing it to give them a really vote. but at the moment they're being quite definitive, definitive enough particularly on matters like climate and immigration . like climate and immigration. oh, so would you suggest that even reform uk are bit woke themselves which know is a virus that has in fact hit the tory party systemically . well and it party systemically. well and it also in infiltrated ukip towards the end . we discussed that. the end. we discussed that. i think last year. you can point ukip . it was woke. think last year. you can point ukip . it was woke . oh it was ukip. it was woke. oh it was drifting certainly. yes. and made that point and i made that point it used to be grassroots what you saw was what you get it was grassroots and suddenly it was grassroots and suddenly it was softly, softly, catchy monkey when the whiff of vermin , the way of ukip and perhaps the occasional knighthood . let the occasional knighthood. let me give you an example of that, if i may mark just for a moment,
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very quickly , immigration. now very quickly, immigration. now if you look at the reform was saying, yes, let's take back to their point of embarkation . it's their point of embarkation. it's about number four on the list of things to do with immigration. now if i were the leader of reform , i would be coming on tv reform, i would be coming on tv and i will mobilise the royal navy, the royal marines and, we will turn them back. and i don't give a staff what the french think the world thinks, what anybody thinks, what the left wing think. we're going tell wing think. we're going to tell back. them come here back. don't let them come here and a hotel and try and streamline procedure. because what got at the moment, what we've got at the moment, which is fascinating with the home is saying, home office, is saying, hey, we've this, go and take them we've this, we go and take them out the french coast, but actually bringing proposals our hotel fast track them hotel and we fast track them become citizens . that become british citizens. that isn't the answer to our immigration. isn't the answer to our immigration . all right. that's immigration. all right. that's not the and of course , richard not the and of course, richard tice is on record as saying he's going to go with the paris accord on climate and trump's
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been getting now to look, if we may, across the water. president trump ex president trump is beginning say look just a minute this climate thing not real it's signs it's a bit of a hoax. this climate thing not real it's signs it's a bit of a hoax . and signs it's a bit of a hoax. and if you go to the pubs in the provinces believes that i'm talking to you from yorkshire it is freezing and it's been freezing for days , 30 years. freezing for days, 30 years. we've had to listen to this . and we've had to listen to this. and if richard tice came out and said, we vote two things, we're going to tow them back with the royal we've got to rid royal navy and we've got to rid of all this nonsense about of all this silly nonsense about climate and we've got climate hopes. and we've got start sorting ourselves out that would give a massive would possibly give a massive working vote in the north working class vote in the north of england. i don't have that at the moment . godfrey bloom , what the moment. godfrey bloom, what is your view of the current strikes that have been threatened and scheduled by nurses and the rmt rail union? the nurses on, the 15th and 10th of december and the rmt both of christmas . what is fascinating
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christmas. what is fascinating isn't it just leaving the rail strike for a moment? because that comes goes. and i'm going to gauge the i'm 73 i grew up with rail strikes that's nothing new to me . but what with rail strikes that's nothing new to me. but what is interesting is the nurses now the royal college of who should be sticking up for nurses aren't doing so what they're saying is want more money more money, more bills more money and all this kind of thing. bills more money and all this kind of thing . but what they're kind of thing. but what they're not saying what royal college of nurses are saying, not saying what royal college of nurses are saying , there are 1.2 nurses are saying, there are 1.2 million people employed by the nhs less than half of whom now have any medical qualification . have any medical qualification. we have diversity officers . we we have diversity officers. we have all sorts of administrators who we're paid more than nurses. well royal college of nursing, it should be saying the government is can you sack at least 400 thousands of these freeloaders , get rid of them, freeloaders, get rid of them, and there'll be a lot go money for nurses and new hospitals that we need. but then not saying that just saying give me, give me, give me and give me.
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and most of the money that goes to the nhs these are unaudited. don't know where goes, it don't know where it goes, it disappears, getting worse disappears, it's getting worse and and worse. this and worse and worse. and this going reform to get going back to reform to get involved perhaps richard involved is what perhaps richard tyson reform should be saying let's start sacking massively sacking the people in the national health service who don't actually treat patients the shortest saying that they're sort of saying that. but he's not definitive. he's not loud . i not definitive. he's not loud. i well, i'm delighted to say that . joined now by an old friend of yours, godfrey bloom, because we have the legendary television journalist and reporter michael crick live in the studio . crick live in the studio. godfrey michael. michael godfrey, can we pick up the comments of godfrey that michael , in relation to those strikes , , in relation to those strikes, you think that the public will ever forgive nurses, for example , downing their stethoscopes dunng , downing their stethoscopes during a winter nhs crisis? i think actually the public will be very sympathetic to nurses andindeed be very sympathetic to nurses and indeed junior doctors who are also threatening to strike because i think they recognise
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the extraordinary job nurses do and they recognise the fact that like many people in most of the role of the public really for the last 1214 years their pay in real terms has gone down and there comes a point it's actually very, very difficult for them to carry on being i mean, a lot of them will have put ploughed huge amounts of money into training. and that and the, you know, let them go to university these days and there comes a point where they say, look, enough is enough. we've been having effectively pay we've been having effectively pay cuts year after year after year at a when the country year at a time when the country more nurses more people to work in the health service. so i think that the public will at least be sympathetic the is going to arise if you then get one or two people dying and the health service as a result of the fact that people have been on strike. well, that's a concern now. it's not an accident that we've brought both of you together because like to
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build bridges once i sorted out this drama, i'll head northern ireland the middle east ireland and then the middle east because i believe because michael crick, i believe that you had something of a contretemps with godfrey bloom some time ago you care to some time ago do you care to give your side of story give your your side of the story what's account of what what's your account of what happened well it was happened michael. well it was at a conference about ten a ukip conference about ten years now and i went up to years ago now and i went up to godfrey with conference brochure, which had lots of little photographs of all, i think the ukip councillors from the country and i couldn't a single black face amongst them and or asian and i put this point to godfrey bloom and he got very very angry with me and he sees the conference brochure i mean i was making very serious point actually and he bashed me over the head with it and caused accuse me of being a racist and it it was on the television bulletins and it was live actually and then all the television bulletins subsequently . and as a result of subsequently. and as a result of that and some other comments that and some other comments that godfrey made that day, he
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was actually suspended from the party and told he couldn't stand the european parliament again. i think that's accurate godfrey, isn't it? so godfrey, what's your of the story? i'm going to be judge judy here today. hi well, first of all, good evening you we've had a few send you there. we have yeah we have pints of by the sounds . look pints of by the sounds. look there's only one thing i would say. the reason i got a bit spiky about it, i've say. the reason i got a bit spiky about it , i've always spiky about it, i've always believed , i believe since i was believed, i believe since i was a very big band in college , a very big band in college, should have no impact whatsoever on views whatsoever . and if you on views whatsoever. and if you hold branch up and start pointing out who's got a brown, who's got two black faces, that white face, i get a bit angry as far as i'm concerned, i'm a meritocratic and i don't care what colour skin you are, it doesn't bother me . i don't doesn't bother me. i don't really think it probably michael crick, but he two points mate because he didn't show business well michael you have probably
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faced worse adversaries than godfrey bloom but i can't imagine it was fun to be clubbed over the head or neck , my neck over the head or neck, my neck and face. to be honest, it was pretty many television reporters suffered much worse than any of the ink from the ukip brochure. go onto your face, onto your skin before any of the. not that i'm aware of. in fact the next day i went to immigration. no, the next day i went to the pound . the next day i went into the ukip conference and. people wanted to, you know , they with wanted to, you know, they with the brochure and they wanted me to autograph their brochures and they wanted to autograph my brochure and it was, it would quite a stir actually. it caused the star and it was a big story for both of you i'm godfrey i'm to reserve judgement but would like to offer michael a tiny apology . no, we've, we've had apology. no, we've, we've had a few since then and we're perfectly all right each other. it's not an issue. i you what though. just for a bit a laugh. i'm here in yorkshire. let me
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tell you. i couldn't a drink in any pub yorkshire people coming up thought it was a huge joke and bought me a i think i think michael takes it in the same there we are and godfrey following the royal protocol never apologise and never thanks gentlemen for a great sport in relation to that drama ten years ago and it's good that we're all here still to tell the tale, godfrey join us soon. it's been a brilliant conversation founding member of, ukip political commentator, entrepreneur you name it. godfrey bloom . and of course godfrey bloom. and of course we've heard from michael crick . we've heard from michael crick. talk to michael after this. he's writing about keir starmer recently and keir starmer's rehab of the labour party. but question is as britain faces unprecedented economic challenges , is keir starmer the challenges, is keir starmer the best for britain ? plus, we'll be best for britain? plus, we'll be joined by danielle , the super joined by danielle, the super wag . a terrible story last week wag. a terrible story last week of course raheem sterling, the england striker. he was burgled
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one of those people that has i have always i've never been though we did speak, i wanted my kids to be raised with their grandpa because i didn't trust babysitters . when i was dealing babysitters. when i was dealing with disability and having to work, i didn't know anyone in los angeles well enough that i felt safe with that. so i felt like i was doing that felt safe with that. so i felt saying we ask for comment from the royal family and they didn't declined to comment. well, they're now saying they won't even approached. and time and time again, this is a very partial, one sided view of what has been happening . and it's has been happening. and it's a shame that that we can't get
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some sort of balance . the media some sort of balance. the media are doing a very excited about my mark meets guest at ten because it is none other than nick leeson, the man who literally broke the bank he brought down barings bank and he brought down barings bank and he he tells his story at o'clock, how he managed to rebuild his life after a stint in jail. but look lots to get through in this hour with labour consistently ahead in the polls with many a landslide victory . with many a landslide victory. the next election is . keir the next election is. keir starmer the right man to britain as we face almost unprecedented economic societal headwinds . is economic societal headwinds. is he really the best alternative
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for this country ? ask the for this country? ask the legendary political and reporter michael crick. hello, michael. hello. let's let's go back to ukip in a moment because i know you've got some thoughts there on tice and reform uk and all rest of it, but can we talk about keir starmer ? he's done a about keir starmer? he's done a good job, hasn't he rehabilitating his own party and excavating it of ghost of anti—semitism . but i think he's anti—semitism. but i think he's got a ways to go before he like our next prime minister. well think odds are he will be think the odds are he will be our next prime minister. i don't think labour's got it in the bag. think there's this bag. i think there's this extraordinary there is in extraordinary gap there is in the, in electoral system the, in the electoral system that labour needs a 12% lead over conserver tives just to over the conserver tives just to get a majority one. well if you think blair only had a 12.8% lead over the conservatives way back in 1997 when he won his first term of office in that great landslide election, the electoral distribution is totally different these days. now get 12% over the now to get 12% lead over the conservatives is a formidable target. and i think the most likely outcome is you will have
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starmer in ten, but he will be a minority and he will depend on lib votes and snp votes from to time and all the complications that that will cause. but i mean i think that this government is just so totally discredited . it just so totally discredited. it is not i mean, it's a incompetent. i mean they just you know, the country is falling , public services are falling apart . they've mishandled the apart. they've mishandled the economy and they've lost any reputation they had for integrity . and we've seen that. integrity. and we've seen that. and whether it's ppe contracts or sale of places in the house of lords and all of that with, with, with rishi sunak, they know they haven't changed a lot. this one is that many of the people are billionaires. but he doesn't he's not holding doesn't have he's not holding the he. wasn't you the bloody is he. he wasn't you know met a protagonist, a know a met a protagonist, a partygate any such thing. partygate or any such thing. well many of the many of the people who are his government were involved in those kind of things. but i don't think the pubuc things. but i don't think the public don't blame do public they don't blame rishi do they? they may not blame him,
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but. well, actually, i think but. well, actually, no, i think they i think they do? i think they do i think they do? i think they do i think they do? i think they associate them all together. there a together. i think there came a point summer . together. i think there came a point summer. it happens point this summer. it happens often government . we saw it often in government. we saw it with black wednesday , the john with black wednesday, the john major government. saw with major government. we saw with the devaluation for in 1967. and there comes a point where the pubuc there comes a point where the public does lose total belief in government. most the public don't notice most events in politics. but there a moment and it's generally something to do with money the pounds and finances so on and think finances and so on and i think that it's incredibly difficult now for the conservatives to win it back. i think most of the pubuc it back. i think most of the public will say that's it but the conservatives they had that chance. for 12 chance. they've there for 12 years tired their they've years that tired their they've run of ideas they've run out run out of ideas they've run out of good people and that's why i think and i think, you know, things could are likely to get much next two years much worse in the next two years and the next election, the and the next election, by the way, years away. i mean, way, is two years away. i mean, it's long time. but it's quite a long time. but i mean, inflation goodness knows how to carry on how long it's going to carry on at 11% or that kind of level,
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you know, a real cost of living squeeze strikes , industrial squeeze strikes, industrial discontent and all sorts of other prominent health services falling apart. it's difficult to see how stop. i'm sorry. falling apart. it's difficult to see how stop. i'm sorry . a stone see how stop. i'm sorry. a stone sunak gets a grip on, all of that. but then, of course, it's difficult to see how starmer would get a grip on it once he came to office and. i agree with you. i mean, think the brand you. i mean, i think the brand is shot pieces, but i just wonder whether sunak can reinvent himself and almost decouple from that conservative brand and just pitch himself as. decouple from that conservative brand and just pitch himself as . a s brand and just pitch himself as. a s it? what was that theresa may? strong and stable , you know, strong and stable, you know, pitch himself as a safe pair of hands? because i know the tories are unpopular, but i don't think that anyone particularly likes c'est armour. well, i think people are not in by starmer in the same way they were by tony benn. the same way they were by tony benn . sorry tony blair and tony benn. sorry tony blair and tony benn. sorry tony blair and tony benn. tony blair 25 years ago. oh harold wilson , 1964. you know oh harold wilson, 1964. you know that. oh harold wilson, 1964. you know that . wilson and blair in those that. wilson and blair in those days. that. wilson and blair in those days . and in a way, starmer is
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days. and in a way, starmer is modelling himself on both men and i mean his conference speech this october i thought was actually one of the best leaders speeches i've ever heard. and it's so much better he was doing two years ago. he's performing much better now. confidence is up . got a step, has it? we're up. got a step, has it? we're talking about two very, very inexperienced here, sunak and starmer. they've both of them only been mp for seven years and every now and then it shows and you sunak has had to do with the whole succession of continuingly steep sleaze scandals and so on. the whole problems of suella braverman , the whole problem of braverman, the whole problem of the migrants crossing the channel and now the ppe scandal, which looks like blowing up way beyond . baroness mon into all beyond. baroness mon into all sorts of other companies. their links with the conservative party and i just think people are fed up with this government just like they were in 1997. remembering in 1992 we had black
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wednesday after that the economy actually went rather well . ken actually went rather well. ken clarke is chancellor and so on but it was too late . but the it was too late. conservatives had lost public confidence and it's very very difficult to get it back. i don't want to labour the point yet no pun intended. but an interesting poll puts, rishi sunak of keir as sunak ahead of keir starmer as best prime minister so it's clear labour are a shoo in for some sort of victory potentially. as you've hinted, the biggest party in a hung parliament. but is the starmer factor concern, particularly in those red wall many won't forgive labour for their position on brexit? of course the architect thereof was keir starmer as shadow ? on the other starmer as shadow? on the other hand, i don't think i think many of those red wall seats at the same time won't this government and boris johnson , for all the and boris johnson, for all the promises he made back in 19 about levelling up and have been made since and nothing's happened, there's been and frankly was never likely to happen within one, four or five year parliament. but johnson around telling everybody yet we
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will make an impact we will we come and rescue you and it didn't hasn't happened and it's not going to happen in the next two years. i mean, partly it's because of covid. that's not the government's fault. but nonetheless haven't managed government's fault. but no make .ess haven't managed government's fault. but no make an haven't managed government's fault. but no make an impactaven't managed government's fault. but no make an impactave those naged to make an impact in. those seats and of those people seats and some of those people will go back to i think will go back to labour. i think the swing towards labour is likely be stronger in likely to be much stronger in south amongst middle class south and amongst middle class people than is in the north. and we saw that in the local . you do we saw that in the local. you do the evidence of that that that once people have stopped labour after 100 years it's quite difficult to win them back but nonetheless i think the overall outcome will be a starmer minority in my view . outcome will be a starmer minority in my view. but i think there's all sorts of problems has got. i mean he right now he looks like harry wilson he looks incredibly unprincipled. i mean we saw it today where, you know , saying that the proposed new trade union laws are wrong but that labour won't repeal . well, that labour won't repeal. well, if something's wrong, then
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surely labour should repeal it . surely labour should repeal it. it looks opportunistic. and you've seen that time and again. i mean, look at the way in which he became leader. you know he was using the word socialist all the time, saying that policies wouldn't from the wouldn't change much from the corbyn he'd said corbyn years. not long he'd said how make a good how corbyn would make a good minister. is minister. now starmer is a totally different, man, he said , you know, he would allow local labour parties their labour parties choose their candidates. i this quite candidates. well, i this quite closely and the grip that starmer and his team really it's the team more than him i think have got on the party they've really eliminated the left almost from you being chosen as almost from you being chosen as a candidate anywhere . it has a candidate anywhere. it has become quite a storm party. the labour party right now and it makes me worry as to what civil liberties be like under a starmer government . it would be starmer government. it would be like for members of the media for instance, even though starmer was, you know, in his day , human rights lawyer. but day, human rights lawyer. but you're so right, especially given that starmer was quite the lockdown hawk during the
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pandemic let's wargame the nofion pandemic let's wargame the notion of prime minister keir starmer in times of plenty laboun starmer in times of plenty labour, governments have done good things . country good things. country particularly in the blair years. i would argue, however what's the point of a labour government 7 the point of a labour government ? the country's broke. i know i mean that the problem he has because ain't going to be i mean 97 labour the economy was doing really well after you know following black wednesday and the kenneth clarke fixed the roof well to a degree and the labour were very cautious about spending the money but they did they did spend over the next eight years or so they did spend a lot of that money. they did they gradually started although they gradually started although they fast many they didn't do it fast as many of the labour party wants or do it as fast actually, ken clarke said he would have done he'd said he would have done if he'd had remained in office. had if he'd remained in office. he astonished at how he was astonished at how cautious the cautious labour were after the conservatives thrown out. that's not possible now. i mean, you not a possible now. i mean, you know, it's very difficult to see how labour makes a difference
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and you can have all and of course you can have all these trade many of them these trade unions, many of them affiliated labour, most affiliated to the labour, most of to the labour of them affiliated to the labour party. a labour party. now expecting a labour government pay government will meet their pay demands least meet them demands or at least meet them a bit more generously than , than bit more generously than, than the had know there the conservatives had know there ain't going to be any money. you're you're not going to be able to deal with the, the problems of immigration the cross migrants exercises cross channel migrants exercises a of people in this country a lot of people in this country rightly or wrongly and all sorts of other problems are not easily under health. so it's just these are not easily solvable. so you could actually see starmer coming to office and having very little leeway to actually people's lives and make an impact but i think that people will give him a lot of understand and give him time simply because of some of the awful things that have been going on these last 12 years which will have been extended, of course, to 14. michael, we know you've a crazy day and you are busiest in are the busiest man in journalism. thank very much journalism. thank you very much . do. thank you soon. okay.
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great thank you. the remarkable michael crick. next up, that terrible story of raheem sterling, england , whose family sterling, england, whose family were burgled whilst was in qatar. just what do the wives and girlfriends go through under those circumstances. we'll speak to reality star and super wag the lovely danielle lloyd. she's next . one of those people that has blamed meghan. i blame both of them equally. and i've always
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to energise her campaign. of course, false. i mean , i'm not course, false. i mean, i'm not saying she hasn't been manipulative, but i think he wanted to be manipulated . i wanted to be manipulated. i mean, a couple you say they were not critical of all brexit voters. i'm sorry. they absolutely were. they there was absolutely were. they there was a direct link between absolutely were. they there was like i was doing that because you are in a wheelchair, sam, and you were going through and you admit it ,
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and you were going through and you admit it, you were going through a very difficult divorce, but always knew that your daughter was safe with her paternal grandparents. and that and that was the priority. so to next welcome back to mark dolan tonight, which begins at the earliest of 8 pm. every friday and saturday. very excited . at and saturday. very excited. at 10:00, my mark meets guest nick leeson , the man who literally leeson, the man who literally broke the bank. he brought down banngs broke the bank. he brought down barings bank , tells his barings bank, tells his incredible story. plus the big question is meghan markle . we'll question is meghan markle. we'll speak to a top american and my and the papers and lots more , of and the papers and lots more, of course. big opinion on take it ten is on the way. but as you
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know is in the grip of world fever as england face france tomorrow night in a crunch game. but what's it like at home and abroad for footballers families when it comes to safety ? raheem when it comes to safety? raheem sterling was forced to fly back from briefly following an armed robbery at his family in surrey . what do the wives and girlfriends and kids go through to discuss this ? i'm delighted to discuss this? i'm delighted to discuss this? i'm delighted to welcome a very good friend of the show, reality star entrepreneur model and ex wag danielle lloyd . hi, danielle . hi danielle lloyd. hi, danielle. hi there. thanks for having me on. so great to have you back on the show. look, you were married to jamie you've had i think it's three beautiful kids so you know what it's like being the other half of a famous footballer what do you that rahim's family would have gone through in that traumatic burglary rahim on the other side of the world? i think it must have just been such a
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scary experience i mean, so think that they were in the house. i mean, a scary experience for anybody to have to go through. but i think footballers in general targets have because they earn so much money and they obviously have a lot of nice and again this can happen to anyone and i think these days with media and you know people like to flaunt the wealth and then they like to flaunt when they're not ahead and this is the problem now with footballers . they've gone off to footballers. they've gone off to the world cup . they can't help the world cup. they can't help people know where they are . so people know where they are. so it's just a horrible time for the whole family . sure, indeed the whole family. sure, indeed were you ever uncomfortable or nervous? did you ever feel vulnerable when jamie was playing football or in another part of the country , you what i part of the country, you what i think of those things , it's been
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think of those things, it's been a long, long time since i've beenin a long, long time since i've been in that situation . times been in that situation. times have changed . media wasn't have changed. media wasn't around in them days and so obviously i was very fortunate enough. obviously i was very fortunate enough . feel like in a situation enough. feel like in a situation my thoughtful now like the way the ends of guys these footballers are absolutely in say so they are massive and you're so right it's not only about football isn't it sad that we live in a world now you can't have nice i mean i've got friends are lucky enough to own a posh watch like maybe a rolex or an amiga and they won't wear that watch out and about late at night it's very sad that it's come to this don't you think . come to this don't you think. yeah. well you know there's been occupations where me and my partner, michael have been out to london and, you know , we've to london and, you know, we've been getting followed by people and they want to see like you ring or watch and it's just
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ring or you watch and it's just is really unsafe and it's really sad but you actually feel like you can't wear your expensive stuff because scared of getting it took off. yeah, yeah. it's an absolute shocker. can we talk about victoria beckham who's having to deny that she's had surgery. what's going on here ? surgery. what's going on here? danielle i thought now i read this story myself today and i think it's a difficult one, really, because obviously with myself, i've had so plastic surgery and i'm absolutely honest and open about it. surgery and i'm absolutely honest and open about it . but i honest and open about it. but i think with her, she's such a role model. she's such huge star, you know it's hard because if she out and said, oh, i'll have had a nice drop, everyone be like, oh, she's a terrible , be like, oh, she's a terrible, terrible role model . now she's terrible role model. now she's promote and cosmetic surgery to young girls . so i think at the young girls. so i think at the end of the who cares like if she wants to operate she to have a
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nice job she can but she i think she said she does like she's doneit she said she does like she's done it with makeup and you look at like drag queens and stuff like like you can do so much with makeup these days so she might be telling the truth . might be telling the truth. well, listen, you have not had too much plastic surgery. you look fabulous. we do . don't we look fabulous. we do. don't we have high profile examples of people that are a bit too fond of the surgeon's knife ? it can of the surgeon's knife? it can become addictive content . yeah become addictive content. yeah definitely can become addictive . i'm happy now. i'm content. so my husband's actually told me that i'm definitely not allowed to ever have any i can so i've got a stick to that. look, i think as you get older, you just get more confidence and stuff. so just love yourself a little bit more. and i think that's what it's about if you love yourself then , there's no need yourself then, there's no need to get any surgery done. do you feel ? that there is to get any surgery done. do you feel? that there is as much
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pressure on women to look good in 2022 than perhaps ten years ago?is in 2022 than perhaps ten years ago? is the pressure just same ? ago? is the pressure just same? 100? like feel like gotten a lot worse now because of social and you know people are use of filter all the time on the pictures of i've seen girls in real life and then seeing them on instagram and it's like you don't you don't look like size so it's really difficult and i think it's given off the wrong image to young girls because they see people now like kim kardashian side her flawless skin and big form a tiny waist and then you might see her in real life and she might have pimples on her skin or a skin isn't as smooth as what they actually looks like in a pictures . i think that you know pictures. i think that you know young girls look up to her and it's hard it's hard now listen
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understand your cautionary on plastic surgery but do you think there's anything i should have done because i'm 48 now danielle . and you know mrs. dolan, she doesn't quite look at me in the same way anymore anymore . you same way anymore anymore. you affect the way you are . don't affect the way you are. don't worry. i got bags under my i've got no bomb. i could do with bomb. i mean that's that's really where plastic surgery goes crazy isn't giving people an extra bum mean that's when we've really lost the plot . yeah we've really lost the plot. yeah well i've been there and done awful . she's done it all. awful. she's done it all. danielle, are you and michael and the kids enjoying the football. are you watching the world cup . yeah, you've actually world cup. yeah, you've actually me tonight. i was watching embeds with my i've come down especially for you michael would be happy this is great to have you back on the show come and chat with us soon. brilliant to catch up with you on a range of important issues. danielle lloyd, entrepreneur model tv
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presenter and of course the reality star and former wag but now very happily married to michael who i think is in bed watching this. i hope michael you haven't turned over to football. i'll be very offended lots to get through . at 10:00 my lots to get through. at 10:00 my mark meets guest live the show is nick leeson. this is the man that broke the bank. he brought down barings bank. it was huge financial scandal. it was one of the oldest most respected banks in the world. one man for the wrong calculation ran into a computer and that was he'll tell his story he went to prison and everything but has rebuilt his life course he has his back on gb news. it's all going swimmingly, he tells story of the ten in the big question in the ten in the big question in the next hour is meghan markle bonkers . we'll ask america's bonkers. we'll ask america's psychiatrist . and we've got psychiatrist. and we've got porky parry live in the studio of course, he is the man with the plan. he's a radio and fleet street legend. look forward to
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that. street legend. look forward to that . and lizzie cundy and emma that. and lizzie cundy and emma , my fantastic panellists . but , my fantastic panellists. but next in my big opinion, i'll be sorting out rather big issue. don't go anywhere . sorting out rather big issue. daisy chick is not pulling her punches either. don't be so utterly stupid. a thousand year old monarchy versus a zed list actress. neva, thanks for those. keep them coming. welcome back to the show. how will the media react ? harry and meghan's react? harry and meghan's bombshell documentary series,
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a direct link between brexit and racism . they showed people racism. they showed people flying the union jack and flying the english flag as if pay tree autism is a bad thing and they said that if you were concerned about a immigration, it made you about a immigration, it made you a bad guy . i about a immigration, it made you a bad guy. i know that. i know that it might make you uncomfortable. what racism did play uncomfortable. what racism did play a part and a lot of the reason that a lot of people did
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vote brexit and that is rubbish if you know if you don't come on message so for the sighted as you say the 52% of this country on mark dolan tonight in my opinion this evening as britain opens the first coal mine in decades sense politics seems be returning to this country and energy independence beckons . my energy independence beckons. my mark means quest is nick leeson , the original rogue trader who , caused the collapse of barings bank, arguably the biggest financial scandal of the 20th century. he's up at ten in the big question that's making markle claims she didn't realise
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had to curtsy when meeting queen for the first time. we've got a simple is she bonkers . we'll simple is she bonkers. we'll speak to america's top psychiatrist and this hour in the news agenda with my panel, nicholas sturgeon and all snp in trouble . and should wolf trouble. and should wolf whistling become crime? let me try . just doesn't work. although try. just doesn't work. although anyone has earned it. it's tatyana . she's got the headlines . ma tatyana. she's got the headlines. ma this the latest from the gb newsroom. a child with a suspected case of strep a has died in sussex bringing the total of deaths in the uk to six. the uk health security agency , the child with the most agency, the child with the most student at hove park school . it student at hove park school. it says working with is now with brighton and hove city council as well as the school to raise awareness . the signs and awareness. the signs and symptoms. thousands of royal
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mail staff have walked off the job in a new wave of strikes . job in a new wave of strikes. more than 115,000 workers rallied outside demanding better pay rallied outside demanding better pay conditions. members of the communication workers union will strike again on sunday with . strike again on sunday with. further action planned throughout the month including christmas eve. the prime says the government is looking at tough. new laws to help minimise . the government is always going to try and act fairly reasonably and that's why we accepted in full the recommendations the independent bodies that advise the government on the appropriate levels of pay in the pubuc appropriate levels of pay in the public sector. but what i'm not going to do is ask ordinary families up down the country to pay families up down the country to pay an extra thousand pounds a year to , meet the demands of the year to, meet the demands of the union bosses wouldn't be right and wouldn't be . but what i and it wouldn't be. but what i am going to do is ensure that i minimise the disruption people's lives . the chancellor announced lives. the chancellor announced plans to overhaul the financial sector, pledging to review and replace hundreds of pages of eu
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regulations . replace hundreds of pages of eu regulations. dubbed replace hundreds of pages of eu regulations . dubbed the regulations. dubbed the edinburgh reform , jeremy hunt edinburgh reform, jeremy hunt says brexit has provided a golden opportunity to reshape the rules. more 30 regulatory changes been unveiled, including reversing the measures introduced following the 2008 financial crash . a fuel poverty financial crash. a fuel poverty charity warning the rising cost of living cold weather will leave millions struggling this winter. national action says people are facing a choice of either living in unheated or racking up debt . it comes as the racking up debt. it comes as the uk health security agency has issued a cold weather warning for england with temperatures predicted to drop as low as minus . the met office is warning minus. the met office is warning up to four inches of snow. could in london and the southeast weekend and it looks though argentina will play croatia in the world cup semi—final if that game is in the dying minutes. argentina are beating the netherlands . two one. well these
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netherlands. two one. well these were themes earlier today as croatia knocked brazil out of the tournament supporters in zagreb jumped for joy at the whistle. meanwhile, england are preparing to face reigning champions tomorrow night. captain harry kane says his team are determined to win into this tournament , are determined to win into this tournament, hoping to and believing that we can win it and we've got to a stage now where we've got to a stage now where we expect it to be and now is about trying to push on and we face a really tough game tomorrow but i know everyone's ready we've prepared . we will go ready we've prepared. we will go into that game with . yeah. maybe into that game with. yeah. maybe more belief . what we did back in more belief. what we did back in 2018. tv and tv plus radio is gb news now is back to mark dolan tonight .
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tonight. my thanks to tatty honest sanchez who returns in hour's time in the big question. following the release of harry and meghan's new documentary on, netflix, where she claims didn't realise she had to bow when she met the queen for the first time. we're asking, is markle bonkers ? we'll be asking bonkers? we'll be asking america's top psychiatrist in my big as britain opens first coal mine in decades , common sense mine in decades, common sense politics seems be returning to this country and finally energy beckons . my mark meets guest is beckons. my mark meets guest is nick leeson, the original rogue who caused the collapse . barings who caused the collapse. barings bank, arguably the biggest financial scandal of 20th century. he's been to prison, but he's rebuilt his life. and he tells his story at ten in the news agenda . is nicholas news agenda. is nicholas sturgeon in trouble ? we can only sturgeon in trouble? we can only hope. should wolf whistling
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become a crime. and here's a question you is it too cold market? what do you think ? is it market? what do you think? is it too cold? i don't think it's cold enough. with me throughout the show is my brilliant all star panel, radio and fleet street legend . mike porky, parry street legend. mike porky, parry . he's got a warm heart. let me you. showbiz queen lizzie cundy . all of her is warm and positive of charm , political positive of charm, political opinion . political commentator opinion. political commentator emma . now, that's not emma. emma. now, that's not emma. there you go . that was that was. there you go. that was that was. you have , my big miss. so badly. you have, my big miss. so badly. midsole as mike porky parry. and i want to hear from you throughout the show. the best part of the programme is when you get in. i love your emails. mark at gb news dot uk and this show a golden rule. we don't do boring. not on my watch . i just boring. not on my watch. i just won't have it. so the next 2 hours, big debates , big guests hours, big debates, big guests and always pick opinions. let's
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start with . one praise the lord. start with. one praise the lord. there seems have been an outbreak of common sense . at outbreak of common sense. at number ten, britain is to open its first coal mine in 30 is michael gove. the levelling up secretary and aberdeen nightclub dweller gave the green light for the project on wednesday, paving the project on wednesday, paving the way for an estimated investment the way for an estimated investmen t £165 million. that investment £165 million. that will create 500 new jobs in the region , produce 2.8 million region, produce 2.8 million tonnes of coal a year, largely for steelmaking for too long now . the green agenda, which has seen us the colossal natural on our own shores , has exposed us our own shores, has exposed us to unscrew pillars. regimes like arabia and of course, vladimir russia for our of fossil fuels in the west we've indulged the
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eye—watering hypocrisy of decarbonising our own country whilst importing coal. oil and gas from other nations , creating gas from other nations, creating the illusion that we've gone green. that's what i call cooking the books . it's cooking the books. it's unforgivable that face a winter energy crisis . given the fact energy crisis. given the fact that we have our feet. an estimated 2 to 3 decades worth of shale , a potential three of shale, a potential three decades worth of natural and oil, an of 100 years of coal . oil, an of 100 years of coal. now i want to clean the planet and get those carbon emissions down. i'm no climate change denier and i don't think it's a hoax. but whatever your view, who doesn't want green sustainable , cheap energy? who sustainable, cheap energy? who doesn't want cleaner air? who doesn't want cleaner air? who doesn't want cleaner air? who doesn't want to hand the planet to future generations in better than we found? it's after all, it was a focus effort to clean
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up the air in london, which saw off a public health crisis due to shocking air quality and that famous p super fog. so where there's a will? there's a way. but the transition to a more eco conscious planet friendly economy must be a gradual one which sees investment, green tech and innovation , which we tech and innovation, which we are a world leader , but which are a world leader, but which also sees us take of the vast natural resources at our disposal . if you think the disposal. if you think the import putting coal from somewhere else makes more sense than digging our generating jobs and national income, then can't help you . during the pandemic help you. during the pandemic covid, measures were handed down as a fait accompli with the government effectively just fencing with democracy for a couple of years in what was in my view, a doomed, expensive to control a virus with the eco agenda we are once again guinea
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pigs agenda we are once again guinea pigs an experiment this time to clean up the planet's . as with clean up the planet's. as with the covid measures, the current agenda looks set to this country to a lower standard of living, higher debt because green renewables are flaky and eye wateringly expensive and a further encroachment on our way of life . i mentioned in my of life. i mentioned in my monologue while sitting for in excellent mark steyn this week that the city of oxford is already rolling plans for a climate in which residents will only be allowed to drive in streets on certain days of the year and being forced to stay in their own zones has, i think you'll agree , echoes of you'll agree, echoes of communist china. you'll agree, echoes of communist china . i've got no communist china. i've got no doubt that in time the government try to forcibly ration energy and give us some kind of hellish carbon allowance, which means that once
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we've done a couple of flights a yean we've done a couple of flights a year, driven our kids to school and heated the living room , and heated the living room, we've used up all of our tokens and will be left shivering in our unable even to turn on the kettle and make a cup of tea. how do you like ? for me, quite how do you like? for me, quite weak full fat milk. no sugar, thanksif weak full fat milk. no sugar, thanks if every country , the thanks if every country, the world was embarking on this push for net zero, i guess it would have merits. but why should us brits make ourselves and colder whilst countries like the usa, brazil and china burn fossil fuels for fun. i think the push for net zero is another element of liberal progressivism which is infecting the west . now is infecting the west. now they're ruining energy policy . they're ruining energy policy. go woke, no smoke . i've always go woke, no smoke. i've always said when it comes to energy. we need a mix. long term nuke and renewables. i've got no problem with that . but in the short to with that. but in the short to medium term , coal, oil and gas
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medium term, coal, oil and gas must play their part. and given that we've got so much of it here, my message is clear. one. drill, baby . drill, baby. what's your view? mark at gb news dot uk. i'll get to your feedback, but reacting to your feedback, but reacting to my big opinion and all of the night's big stories, including the papers at. exactly 1030 sharp. you can set your watch to it. radio and fleet street legend mike porky parry . show legend mike porky parry. show biz queen broadcaster. entourage preneur and good friend of mine, lizzie cundy and political commentator and journalist and good friend emma burnell . let me good friend emma burnell. let me start with you, if i may emma. what's your verdict ? this what's your verdict? this decision to open a coal mine , decision to open a coal mine, cumbria, for the first time in three decades. i you . i'm here three decades. i you. i'm here to disagree with you, marcus . to disagree with you, marcus. you know, that's quite often my
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realm. surely not. yeah it would be, as you say, we don't do boring. it would be very boring . if we all agreed. i don't think . this is the right . if we all agreed. i don't think. this is the right move. i really want to see a good energy mix. as you said. i have really want to see a good energy mix. as you said . i have been mix. as you said. i have been completely turned in my lifetime on nuclear. i grew . completely turned in my lifetime on nuclear. i grew. i started off very anti—nuke kind of power. i'm now absolutely . it power. i'm now absolutely. it has to be absolutely at the core of making sure we keep the lights on. and also it's much it's much safer than it used to be. and it's much safer than it used to be. and it's much cheaper than a more dependable. we to make bargains and we we have to make bargains and we aren't going to have some sort of utopia and mix. and therefore that's compromise. i don't think that. and think it's worth saying this this coal won't be for working towards our fuel bills. it's a coking coal. it's going to be used particularly for the steel industry. unfortunately, itself is struggling in the uk. well, completely separate. i want to see better jobs in that
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completely separate. i want to see betterjobs in that . i think see betterjobs in that. i think cumbria has all sorts of things that it can and be offering and my having watched the industry being decimated with no future plans put in place is going back to a term solution like this rather really investing long term transitional solutions really help those local communities not just for the next five years, but the next 50 to 100 years is short termism and i don't think that's common sense . listen, you know, we have sense. listen, you know, we have the same ambitions, emma but i see the long term just it's nuclear and renewables , solar nuclear and renewables, solar panels, it's wind. you name it. but the bottom line that for the foreseeable we're going to be importing fossil fuels from abroad. it just doesn't make to me we import some fossil fuels but we could massive fully ramp up our investment in tidal our investment wind all of the things that we know will be long term . and the other thing we term. and the other thing we could do is be world leaders . we
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could do is be world leaders. we are innovative in this country i part of my reason for wanting to invest in these industries is so that we can be the exporters not the importers . well it's a nice the importers. well it's a nice idea but lizzie cundy , the idea but lizzie cundy, the germans have invested upwards of ,200 billion in renewables over the years, and they the last ten years, and they face a winter fuel. so i'm not sure how realistic these eco goals are . no, exactly, mark. goals are. no, exactly, mark. and i'm more with i mean, look what's happened this year with the war in ukraine. we have to be energy independent. we can't be energy independent. we can't be held to ransom by any but the race to net zero for us is idea because unless other nations like china which is up there with a carbon near the near thirties i think all over us say. 1% what is the point of hurting our own economy . to get to net zero. own economy. to get to net zero. it simply not make sense it's
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pirate victory which anyone means no one wins. it's stupid because you know unless the other nations and for 27 i mean what has happened on all the other crops let's be honest and china want their you know the ones that are that we need for our energies into convincing the nafions our energies into convincing the nations like china and others like say to do something because it's silly when we have only 1% of carbon emissions. well let's see. lizzie, you got all excited when said cocaine. coal? no it's coking coal, isn't say you behave yourself . you know you're behave yourself. you know you're not in the groucho club now. you know , don't do that. go to the know, don't do that. go to the great trading rule for key it's time for you to get rid of that fastback, mercedes benz and go many . people think it's madness many. people think it's madness that. many. people think it's madness that . we're going back to coal. that. we're going back to coal. many mean most of the scientific community globally will agree with emma 100. well, emma put up
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a very good argument there for you know reasons why we gave up coal and why we do it now to support the steel industry, which is very good indeed . and which is very good indeed. and nuclear power has to be future. and the fact that we've got brilliant companies in this country like who can produce nuclear power stations , which nuclear power stations, which are literally about 1/10 the size of previous nuclear power stations, mean means we've got to go that way . but can i just to go that way. but can i just say this ? there was a fantastic say this? there was a fantastic story. we all saw this week, and thatis story. we all saw this week, and that is that we've come to a deal with , america, right? so deal with, america, right? so russia has come to deal with joe biden and they're to ship loads and loads of gas. the biden and they're to ship loads and loads of gas . the atlantic, and loads of gas. the atlantic, which is 3000 miles wide and bnng which is 3000 miles wide and bring to this country so we can use it to wean ourselves off the gas and resources that we used to get from russia . come on. to get from russia. come on. i just point out that all that gas is , fracking gas. right. it's
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is, fracking gas. right. it's america produces because now the world's lead operator getting gas out of the ground even more than the middle east and one of the world's biggest of that gas. and they're exporting this country. but at the same time , country. but at the same time, as emma pointed out, we've got about , i as emma pointed out, we've got about, i would as emma pointed out, we've got about , i would say, a as emma pointed out, we've got about, i would say, a hundred years of gas below the ground in this country. so why on earth are we just pandering to the green lobby , which lizzie has green lobby, which lizzie has pointed is a fatuous and ridiculous target . when we could ridiculous target. when we could actually start sticking drills into the ground . ross and dale into the ground. ross and dale into the ground. ross and dale in lancashire in this country and get our own gas, which would half sorry, half the price of the gas that we're going to need. and by the way, don't the green zealots realise that if you ship a tanker of gas 3000 miles across the atlantic , you
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miles across the atlantic, you are actually damaging the environment. so why not just get our own gas? because it's here well, look, we've proved it's a debating point. what's your view? market gb news dot uk. there's plenty of beneath our feet . there's plenty of hot air feet. there's plenty of hot air in my panel. you'll be hearing from them throughout the show. and don't forget, we've got the papers at exactly 1030. you can set your watch it. but next up is meghan markle. bonkers see you . is meghan markle. bonkers see look at this terrible comment? and i really do mean that that prince harry made about your father , father thomas, and that father, father thomas, and that might , of father, father thomas, and that might, of course, is incredibly sad . i thought that before
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were racist to vote brexit. you said for a large proportion of those voters that's just a couple thing to say. i mean, i'm not just going to have that where is your proof that people who voted for brexit were racist? we finish the sentence with you through the proof is in the fact that the most people, with you through the proof is in in three. well a big reaction to my big opinion monologue. i'm delighted that the government are to open. the first coal mine in 30 years in cumbria. i clean renewables and nuclear long term, but in the meantime i don't want to rely on dictators like vladimir putin or tyrants like joe biden,
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frankly, because we've done the deal frankly, because we've done the deal, buy shale gas from . the deal, buy shale gas from. the americans, rick, says , use every americans, rick, says, use every resource available to keep safe and warm whilst we drive forward with nuclear for a long term clean energy . just get on with clean energy. just get on with it. wind farms are as much use as an ashtray on a of course it's a good idea, says pamela. we're importing coal, so why do we not mine own? and we need to urgently explore fracking also . urgently explore fracking also. adrian more coking coal will be exported, which will stop us getting it from russia. the pits never have been closed a pit man. i know when pits were closed in northumberland , was closed in northumberland, was made redundant. they were all made redundant. they were all made redundant. they were all made redundant. and of course suffered hugely as a result . suffered hugely as a result. look, thank you for that, adrian . get to more of your opinions if you disagree, drop me a line mark@gbnews.uk it's time now for this . yes, it's time. mark@gbnews.uk it's time now for this . yes, it's time . the big this. yes, it's time. the big question in which i tackle a
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major news of the day tonight, the world is still reeling from harry and meghan's bombshell netflix documentary series . but netflix documentary series. but with some casting, meghan as manipulative, fake or even slightly controlling all these criticisms fair ? or is this an criticisms fair? or is this an example of harsh treatment by the press ? what motivates this the press? what motivates this young ? what is her frame of the press? what motivates this young? what is her frame of mind and is she a force for good or ill? and meghan markle claims she not know anything about the royal family or that she didn't realise . she had to curtsy when realise. she had to curtsy when meeting the queen. our question is , a simple one is meghan is, a simple one is meghan bonkers . what do you think? mark bonkers. what do you think? mark gbnews.uk? susan has emailed , gbnews.uk? susan has emailed, said absolutely she is bonkers, but let's the views now of a professional a top shrink, a world renowned in fact she's known as america's second breast doctor . carol known as america's second breast doctor. carol liebermann joining live from the united states. good evening, dr. carol . good
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good evening, dr. carol. good evening . i don't know what the evening. i don't know what the american translation is for the word bonkers, but has meghan markle got a screw loose? is she mad ? yes yes , she is a malicious mad? yes yes, she is a malicious malicious. yes a malignant narcissist to malignant narcissist. she's also also a sociopath . and this new sociopath. and this new documentary , which i suffered documentary, which i suffered through three plus hours getting more nauseous and more drowsy as it went on she she is very dangerous you know she's already proven that she's very dangerous what her one goal in life is get as much attention as she can and she doesn't . who she destroys she doesn't. who she destroys the process . you say that, but the process. you say that, but this is a woman who has spoken, moving early about the fact that when she was in the spotlight
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serving royal family living in the uk , a complete culture shock the uk, a complete culture shock for her. she had a terrible mental health problems and got no support from the palace. this woman's been through hell ? oh woman's been through hell? oh yeah, right . woman's been through hell? oh yeah, right. i don't woman's been through hell? oh yeah, right . i don't believe yeah, right. i don't believe that for a second. you know we see if it wasn't clear , i mean, see if it wasn't clear, i mean, first of all, the main thing is think that she and harry are to some degree for the death of prince and the queen because first prince philip died. yes, he was you know, of certain age and in getting in frail health , and in getting in frail health, but he died a month after the oprah interview . and then the oprah interview. and then the queen died in. anticipation of this netflix documentary and book. and i think that the stress she broke their hearts and that stress i think little it literally led to or at least to their death so. well, carol carol, let interrupt you. let me
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interrupt. carol, just let interrupt. carol, just let interrupt you for a second. this program is , the home of free program is, the home of free speech, and i will, course, give that to you. but you know, you are, of course, a highly regarded medical professional, a world psychiatry , you world renowned psychiatry, you know as well as i do. we don't have evidence that the trauma among the sussexes caused the premature and sad death of the queen or prince philip. but i think it's fair for you to that. it can't have been for their mental health having to witness all that was going on. well, you know , are i mean, of course we know, are i mean, of course we can't say for positively at this . but but we can there are certainly studies long time studies that show that people can die a broken heart. studies that show that people can die a broken heart . and so can die a broken heart. and so basing it on that . right. you basing it on that. right. you know, it is very devastating . know, it is very devastating. think about and so on and the sociopathy that was on display
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in particular in this netflix . in particular in this netflix. don't know if you saw the documentary . yeah but you did documentary. yeah but you did so. i did. it it was it was really , really hard to watch. really, really hard to watch. i mean, the you you referenced was one of the hardest ones where. she makes this you it makes mocks the queen making this curtsy like i'm supposed to curtsy. and, you know, she has a strange expression on her face and one real moment. i mean, the documentary was filled with lies , but the one real moment was harry's when she that curtsy and you could the pain on his face and you could see him thinking , and you could see him thinking, wait a minute, did i make a mistake ? you know, because he mistake? you know, because he grandmother indeed. i think we'll try to source that clip and would be useful if we can watch that. so gregg see if you can work your magic i think it would be interesting to take a look at the fact that that. meghan markle effectively i think mocked the monarchy and, mocked the memory of the queen
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with this rather extravagant foul that she did and as you say , harry was extremely awkward . , harry was extremely awkward. and look, you've been unapologetic your views about meghan and you do that. she's quite manipulative and negative person what's your appraisal of prince harry? i'm glad you asked . you know i used think for the longest time that for harry you he got manipulated and trapped. i mean, i still think he manipulated and trapped into this relationship and into this marriage and so on. but, you know, i have come to more he has been involved, meghan saying things that are towards bringing down the monarchy. the more i realise that it wasn't just he was this poor you know sap who didn't know better. i think that he is conscious there aligned with her because he is really
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angry at his father for having the affair with camilla for the pain that his father gave his mother. so he blames him and he does still have a sense, you know, of that perhaps the monarchy was involved in not just the paparazzi , but, you just the paparazzi, but, you know, there's there were these rumours and i'm not saying that i believe them . i'm saying that, i believe them. i'm saying that, harry, you know , might that the harry, you know, might that the monarchy was somehow involved in princess diana's death of who she was going to be to or going out with . and so there's really outwith. and so there's really some some anger on his part. and some some anger on his part. and so he stays in the background and he let's meghan, say all these horrible things. but you know i think he's some gratification out of . how do you gratification out of. how do you see this dynamic between the two playing out so what sort of shelf life does this relationship have , if it's based relationship have, if it's based on such an unhealthy set of
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themes ? it's not going to last themes? it's not going to last forever . i themes? it's not going to last forever. i think that when meghan sees, you know, when will especially they lose their titles even further . so if harry titles even further. so if harry stops being as as important to her for her fame and so on as he is , then i think if somebody is, then i think if somebody else comes along, you is, then i think if somebody else comes along , you know, is, then i think if somebody else comes along, you know, an a—list , for example , who she a—list, for example, who she could use to , you know, to get could use to, you know, to get her more acting gigs, you know, she she just uses . and so, she she just uses. and so, harry, you know has been i mean, who doesn't want to be a princess right? every little girl wants to be a princess . and girl wants to be a princess. and so he really served the purpose of getting her into onto the world stage . i'm not saying she world stage. i'm not saying she doesn't have any feelings for him, but i think for she doesn't it's not really about for anybody. she doesn't judge or do things based upon her feelings. it's so much about me, me me? what is this person going do for
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me? i'm got to say, that's a brilliant producer. greg has been successful . this guy just been successful. this guy just doesn't take no for an answer. and we've got the clip. so let's bnng and we've got the clip. so let's bring the panel in. but first, let's have a look at this clip of meghan markle explaining how she understand have she didn't understand she'd have to or in front of the to curtsy or in front of the queen. this by the way, is the same meghan , who is pictured in same meghan, who is pictured in front of buckingham palace , a front of buckingham palace, a teenager trip london. so teenager on a trip london. so explain that one. anyway here's the clip. take a look. me i mean, americans will understand this we have mediaeval times dinner and tournament. it was like like . i curtsied as like that like. i curtsied as though like . pleasure though i was like. pleasure meet you, your majesty . poor old you, your majesty. poor old harry could crack a grin . lizzie harry could crack a grin. lizzie cundy. you know meghan markle very well. in fact . and she were very well. in fact. and she were close friends when came to the uk. put your arm around her. you made her. welcome. you
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introduced her to the uk. media scene and she dumped you. what's your view about her mentality ? your view about her mentality? her psychology is . meghan markle her psychology is. meghan markle bonkers . sadly, mark, i think bonkers. sadly, mark, i think she could . i think this bonkers. sadly, mark, i think she could. i think this is a massive assault on the queen. and don't forget this is a family that's grieving . and they family that's grieving. and they are a family. it's a nation still grieving. and i think it's very, very disrespectful . and i very, very disrespectful. and i can even see from harry's face when she does this so—called curtsy that she did . number one, curtsy that she did. number one, i don't think he believed and actually, i think he thought . actually, i think he thought. what the hell are you doing? is disrespectful. i could tell from his face. he looked embarrassed . and this whole mic flicks, i'll call it , is absolute suit i'll call it, is absolute suit of awful , terrible assassination of awful, terrible assassination on the royal family. and they should have the titles removed with the aside. yes porky parry, you've reported length on on the royals as a top newspaper man. your view of meghan markle, is
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she bonkers ? well, i don't want she bonkers? well, i don't want to get that specific because a gentleman to a certain age and i'm white and meghan markle was only colour introduced into royal family. so i'll get attacked . i start getting attacked. i start getting barbaric in my views about a but but clip you've just shown mark. i mean what dreadful dreadful disrespect to a woman who ruled for over 70 years and basically this country on the level and coped with any problem until came along and then has literally taken the mickey out of i mean literally mocking the queen because she was told you're going to have to curtsy when you meet queen. well, for 72 years, people would queue up just to get the line, to be able to curtsy to the queen of england. so i thought that was terribly, terribly disrespectful. i think of these days, i think harry as we always knew him , prince harry is going
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knew him, prince harry is going to wake in montalcino and he's actually going to say himself, what an have i done ? what have i what an have i done? what have i got myself into? i have literally cut the umbilical cord that i had with the most famous family in the world in of wealth in pursuit of glory, but mostly in pursuit of glory, but mostly in pursuit of what my wife wanted me to do against my real family. i am. listen, the clocks against . family. i am. listen, the clocks against. i've never been a fan . against. i've never been a fan. meghan markle's. however i don't think she's bonkers. and i think that she went through quite some mental torture when she became the duchess of sussex. but what's your view about all of this ? well, i'm not a this? well, i'm not a psychiatrist i'm not a psychologist. i'm not going to
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try and diagnose anybody from a distance. it's not my role i don't think anyone should be really doing that. and when it comes to the royal family, as i've said before, i'm a republican and i don't curtsy to anyone. republican and i don't curtsy to anyone . the last person i curtsy anyone. the last person i curtsy to is my ballet teacher when i was six years old and i quite quickly transferred gymnastics . quickly transferred gymnastics. i won't be watching the documentary . i wouldn't watch documentary. i wouldn't watch a documentary. i wouldn't watch a documentary that was from the rest of the royal family so i'm i'm just giant shrug, right. well, listen, let me tell you that it's a fascinating conversation. the emails are coming in thick and fast. conversation. the emails are coming in thick and fast . a deep coming in thick and fast. a deep privilege to welcome you to the program again, carole. carole leber, program again, carole. carole leber , mine is known as leber, mine is known as america's psychiatrist and you can find her at dr. carole, m.d. on twitter . she's can find her at dr. carole, m.d. on twitter. she's on youtube. and it's worth hearing her view. thanks always my pleasure. thank you. great stuff. lots more to come. my mark meets. guest is the man that literally broke the
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bank. it's nick leeson . he's bank. it's nick leeson. he's live at ten. he tells his incredible the papers at 1030. and in my take at ten, i'll be deaung and in my take at ten, i'll be dealing with the cashless society. thanks but no thanks. but next is nicholas sturgeon in trouble ? see you shortly . but next is nicholas sturgeon in sad. i thought that before this . and now she doesn't have a father . and i showed you that father. and i showed you that because if meg wasn't with me , because if meg wasn't with me, then her dad would still be her dad .
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wanted to take control of our borders, to stop foreigners coming in. so how was that racist suggests a little bit of racism . that is not. can i can racism. that is not. can i can we rewind and talk about mix . so we rewind and talk about mix. so you talked we rewind and talk about mix. so i've got gold coming up for you between and 11. should it, wolf whistling become a crime ? does whistling become a crime? does it six stop at 60 and is too cold? we'll get to that shortly . but your emails. how about this on meghan is she is she bonkers. hi mark surely says paul bonkers. hi mark surely says paul. royal protocol must have been explained to by harry and on the subject of the environment in reaction to my big opinion monologue , roxanne big opinion monologue, roxanne sheenis big opinion monologue, roxanne sheen is now edited into a video on twitter at gb news. mark love
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the show and i watch you whilst i do my ironing. the show and i watch you whilst i do my ironing . wow. i'm i do my ironing. wow. i'm honoured . we need to invest in honoured. we need to invest in nuclear and frack in the short term and meghan markle is bonkers . and nick leeson is bonkers. and nick leeson is a dude. while he's on the show later. john, thanks and well done for being such a new man doing your ironing and. all of that. now, this week, nicholas was dealt a major blow with ally alison thewliss being defeated by stephen flynn in. the westminster leadership contest . westminster leadership contest. and if that wasn't bad enough for sturgeon , new poll out this for sturgeon, new poll out this week showed that party is on course to lose 25 employees at the next election . so is the next election. so is nicholas sturgeon in trouble? has the halo slipped? let's speak a good friend of the show, austin sheridan, who i believe is a former snp figure. austin sheridan, who i believe is a former snp figure . part is a former snp figure. part paul is a former snp figure. part paul, the party that we just lost. sheridan so we'll get him in just a moment. lots more emails, by the way, they are coming in thick and fast and we
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seem to have touched a nerve when comes to energy. mark should not be reliant on monsters . putin to heat should not be reliant on monsters. putin to heat our homes. okay austin sheridan is back. homes. okay austin sheridan is back . hi, homes. okay austin sheridan is back. hi, austin. hello are some set some technical there, but we're back. good. like, i didn't want to pull the plug on this. i've been looking forward to this interview because you are a former snp councillor and has the halo slept for? is she in trouble , you think? no don't trouble, you think? no don't think she's in any trouble at all. and also not entirely sure what opinion you want to see happen. to tell us what i seen the snp lost. if consent and the westminster action and the last opinion poll also seen that independence something that 56% i believe the opinion poll you've seen it been shared with a subsample of 200 people and so not something that that can be taken seriously . but i also this taken seriously. but i also this thatis taken seriously. but i also this that is an ally of that question
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that is an ally of that question that lost the election and was someone who wasn't an native one. that's not the that i've everi one. that's not the that i've ever i believe that nicholas sturgeon stephen flynn will be watching and a constructive manner to sure that the snp's voice is helped to make sure that we deliver independence for scotland. and i look forward to seeing what they're doing about . yes, i mean, it was the red field and wilton strategies poll that we were citing which doesn't for great reading for nicholas sturgeon get me wrong, she remains abundant, popular north of the border . but do you north of the border. but do you think that a vote for the snp really a vote for independence. austin . well, i understand that austin. well, i understand that the snp are proposing to use the next westminster election as a de facto and a vote for snp would certainly a vote for independence . now that's is independence. now that's is where maybe i read some caution to the one the mirror of the
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debate because that's going to be a special conference held by the snp early next year and as going to be sworn to the snp are going to be sworn to the snp are going to be sworn to the snp are going to frame that to the pubuc going to frame that to the public and obviously that will like to them explore and stage goesin like to them explore and stage goes in a scottish parliamentary election as a referendum because if we use a westminster election more than disenfranchised 16 year olds got to vote the referendum to 1814 but they won't be able to do so and a scottish parliamentary election and a scottish parliament election also be focussed on scotland only a westminster election could certainly muddying the waters of what's happening along the rest of the uk. and so certainly ethnic consultant pushes ahead through our westminster election . what our westminster election. what will campaign on? that's going to be the de facto. however i would encourage first minister chris to consider other options . well, listen, austin , real . well, listen, austin, real treat to have you on the show. let's catch soon have a great friday evening. sheridan is a former councillor reaction
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coming in to our story is meghan markle bonkers. we're not saying she is , but we are asking she is, but we are asking because we ask the tough questions on mark dolan tonight jacqui says yes. meghan markle is bonkers, self—obsessed, conniving . she's even racist conniving. she's even racist herself and a perpetual liar. king charles needs get a grip and do something before harry and do something before harry and destroy the monarchy . i'm and destroy the monarchy. i'm not watching their documentary. i'm not interested in fiction . i'm not interested in fiction. that's jackie's view. that's her. what's yours? drop me a line if you disagree and you'd like to speak . line if you disagree and you'd like to speak. up for meghan markle . in the end, she is just markle. in the end, she is just a human . she's a young woman. it a human. she's a young woman. it can't be easy to be in the spotlight. so there are two sides to every story later in show. does sex stop 60 should wolf whistling become a crime? and is it too old? and don't forget, at ten, nick at least, and the man that literally broke the bank but we'll talk whistling next are you as one of my female viewers flattered when a bloke does the right or do you
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find it a slap in the face? we'll discuss that . find it a slap in the face? dad. what what ? i mean , her dad. what what? i mean, her father is recovering from a stroke, literally about a three hour drive. i mean , could you hour drive. i mean, could you believe that she doesn't have a hour drive. i mean, could you have been half meghan to know what the war was towards meghan in this country when she announced when he announced that they were going to get married, was for i will never forget ,
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next big reaction to our debate on meghan markle. is she bonkers ? meghan markle. is she bonkers? and we've got this from paul, who says i'm a big fan of meghan, and she has been hung out to dry by the media. however, audrey blames harry and says prince harry is to blame for this royal catastrophe he's allowing his wife to mock his country , british cultures, country, british cultures, traditions and disrespect his family , labelling all of us in family, labelling all of us in britain with the race card. he may be loved with this woman, but us brits are very elegantly put. thanks that audrey. and on snp and nicholas sturgeon has the halo slipped for nicola mark? why do you continue to drag austin sheraton? nicola nicholas sturgeon is not popular
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with the majority scots. no one with the majority scots. no one with half a brain would support . she has destroyed this country with her total incompetence . with her total incompetence. lorna, thank you for your email . we've got so many of you as in .we've got so many of you as in scotland, so you're up north of the border. i lived in edinburgh for years, one of the most beautiful cities in the world. tell your about gb news. tell your friends about gb news. tell your friends about gb news. tell family and let's the tell your family and let's the world together. for one, world together. and i, for one, i'm all the union of the i'm all about the union of the united kingdom of britain united kingdom of great britain and northern ireland. now the government announced today government has announced today that harassment on the that sexual harassment on the street made a with jail street will be made a with jail sentences up two years. this sentences of up two years. this includes catcalling following someone and blocking their path, all of which will be criminalised in england. so should wolf whistling become a crime? reacting to that is my we've got emma and, we've got lizzie and. mike, let me start with you . lizzie, what do you with you. lizzie, what do you think ? a wolf whistle? it's easy think? a wolf whistle? it's easy to joke about it, but actually a lot of women are very uncomfortable. it i'll be upset if i didn't a wolf whistle. i'll be honest if. you if you didn't
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you yourself i would be i think is a compliment. you yourself i would be i think is a compliment . yeah, i like is a compliment. yeah, i like the fun . oh, come on. this won't the fun. oh, come on. this won't be great. i'm braverman. oh, my . as if she's got nothing to do. look what's going on at the minute . the home office in the minute. the home office in the uk border force and this is our interest i'm sorry, there are 42 legal immigrants here . the legal immigrants here. the hotels are busting with them . hotels are busting with them. disease is breaking out. 42,000. yes and it is an absolute disgrace . she is even thinking disgrace. she is even thinking about as an issue to used for. well thought. it was a joke. honestly and i'm sorry i look at write successful entrepreneur model musical actress very good looking costa i'm going go to this is the french somebody for somebody to wolf whistle you to like turn you into justice object don't you think there's a lot more you this bit of fun it's not just i think it's okay can you do it i know can you do
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it with. no, i can't i can't whistle at all. called your church . i literally should . church. i literally should. don't have to whistle however can can i can i just say this of the only reasons the world i'd like to be a bricklayer or scaffolding worker to get money is to see like this. he can't be walking past then for me to give an image my appreciation for you know the of the female form for the lovely way that you've lifted my day because as you sashay past the lovely hips and long legs, it kind of stuff. why shouldn't are you with the perfect yeah well if i was up on a scaffolding after wheels right but for me to be to say i want now indicate how much i admire the female form that person who's just walked me, i'm going to give her a wolf whistle. probably actually have to hire to do it, but nevertheless i would want it. but what is just
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said about, you know, no, i'm not upsetting. why would any woman get upset by giving a compliment by being given a conflict industry? it's a woman that runs a mountain corporation or it's a top and she gets a wolf whistle . where would that wolf whistle. where would that happen? ignore all of that . why happen? ignore all of that. why would that where would that happen? it wouldn't happen at the old bailey. it happen in a boardroom happens the boardroom it happens on the street . we walk on streets . it's street. we walk on streets. it's a social arena where everybody mixes together . so what is the mixes together. so what is the what is the problem? would you have wolf whistles, margaret thatcher or would you have wolf whistled bhutto or mother theresa? bhutto is very friend of mine. now you get . yeah. that of mine. now you get. yeah. that did you. yeah yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah. oh yeah. so don't you remember the diet coke where they were whistling and started two guys before? what's wrong with appreciate it. you really shout. with appreciate it. you really shout . come on darling. give us shout. come on darling. give us a smile to , mother theresa. no, a smile to, mother theresa. no, of course you wouldn't. but mother theresa wouldn't expect
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sort appreciation from the sort of appreciation from the opposite sex . whereas lizzie, opposite sex. whereas lizzie, who has been , you know, leading who has been, you know, leading the way for glamour and personification of all that's great about, you know, femininity . great about, you know, femininity. for most of her life i would expect some league to respond to the way that she conducts herself. i think this is just going mad this is really the woke brigade policy called lads can i just say sorry publicly power is very harsh on mother theresa. i like a woman , mother theresa. i like a woman, a shroud. but listen each their own a bit harsh. you think about. i mean, i like wolf whistling, obviously i mean, i know what everyone on twitter about to say. i hear you. i know, but it happen occasionally, you know, sometimes are quiet nine. but the thing is, i don't like it for babe, but i also don't think that you solve this problem . and that you solve this problem. and for many women is a problem by making a criminal offence. i
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think we need to change it societally and have a situation where. women can feel comfortable to go out in the street and be who they want to be and not to be sexualised when they're not. it's not being sexual. i know it's not my . and sexual. i know it's not my. and i'm sorry. you are not the one being whistled at. but well, never say, never. oh well. well, okay and i enjoy to be on the straight and you not expect to have that behaviour . so it's have that behaviour. so it's appreciation of my game on top of that 11:00 at night. well if it happens in 11:00 at night, that would be very unusual because building sites and it building works are not around building works no are not around that could be seen be intimidating. i totally agree and what about what women do to men women do it to men women don't women don't walk what do i don't women don't walk what do i don't know. no should it be standardised that we think is okay now also how does it make you feel if you get wolf whistled? i mean, it makes me feel cringe. it makes me feel like the streets are not mine to
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free to be who i want to be on it. now i think i'm not being sensitive and just think it's a bit of fun and i and i think that's but to walk down the street doing it and i want to ask a very harsh don't walk down the road and get some whistles at if happens, it's at me. but if it happens, it's fine but it's mild. at me. but if it happens, it's fine but it's mild . no, no way. fine but it's mild. no, no way. it's, it's appreciation. the beginning of an assault . it's an beginning of an assault. it's an appreciation it's a pleasure. i'm just trouble with women as a sexual object rather than the objects that night. why me? that's nonsense . i think the that's nonsense. i think the only women who really upset about wolf whistling are those who don't get wolf whistled . who don't get wolf whistled. well, see what i mean? wolf whistles and i go, yeah, i say, my concern is, please braverman is concentrating , wolf is concentrating, wolf whistling. when we've got 2000 illegal immigrants sorting out on our borders a botched . you on our borders a botched. you sort that out. well, wolf, yes, you're right. legally sort that out. well, wolf, yes, you're right . legally there, you're right. legally there, you're right. legally there, you're out there, you have migration , but it's not a great migration, but it's not a great behaviour. i get wolf whistled by women, by the way, i can i
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just tell you i don't write. no i fly. i'll take the fun out of life. the papers next but next up it might take to a cashless society. no thanks . up it might take to a cashless prepares to table a bombshell, bill, should harry and meghan be stripped of their royal titles? bob joins me live in the studio with royal insider lady victoria harvey and now duke it out with the broadcaster's niece, hedley, in the clash. next, this is the part of the show where you get your voice heard being driven along. she must have been thinking, how did this all happen ? how did this all all happen? how did this all happen? well, everybody felt it. and what's clear is that she comes from meghan , comes from an
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it's 10:00 it's10:00 and this is mark dolan tonight. my mark mates guest is , nick leeson, the guest is, nick leeson, the original trader who caused the collapse . barings bank, arguably collapse. barings bank, arguably the biggest financial scandal, the biggest financial scandal, the 20th century. he went jail, but he's rebuilt his life and he tells his incredible story just a few minutes time. tells his incredible story just a few minutes time . the news a few minutes time. the news agenda with my panel. is it too cold? that's a burning. question of the day and how you stay warm this winter have you got any clever life hacks to keep yourself toasty without raising
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yourself toasty without raising your energy ? oh, so how about your energy? oh, so how about this? does stop at 60 plus tomorrow's papers at exactly 1030. but after this it's my take. at ten, i'm going to talk about cashless society. thanks but no thanks. find out why the headunes but no thanks. find out why the headlines with the priceless tatiana sanchez . mark, thank you tatiana sanchez. mark, thank you very . this is the tatiana sanchez. mark, thank you very. this is the latest tatiana sanchez. mark, thank you very . this is the latest from very. this is the latest from the gb news room. a child with a suspect . the case of strep a has suspect. the case of strep a has in sussex bringing the total number of deaths in the uk to 60. in the uk, health security confirmed the child was a student at hove park . it says it student at hove park. it says it is working with brighton and hove city council as well as the school to raise awareness of the signs and symptoms . thousands of signs and symptoms. thousands of royal mail workers have walked off the job in a new wave of strikes. more than 115,000
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people rallied outside parliament demanding better pay and conditions. members of the communication union will strike again sunday with further action planned throughout the month, including christmas eve , the including christmas eve, the chancellor has plans to overhaul the financial , pledging to the financial, pledging to review and hundreds of pages of eu regulations. dubbed the edinburgh jeremy hunt says brexit provided a golden opportune kitty to reshape the rules . more than 30 regulatory rules. more than 30 regulatory changes have been unveiled, including reversing some measures introduced following the 2008 financial crash . a cold the 2008 financial crash. a cold weather alert is in place . weather alert is in place. england with temperatures predicted to drop to as low as minus ten , the uk health minus ten, the uk health security agency encouraging people to look out for those most at risk as freezing persist across the country . snow is across the country. snow is forecast to fall london and the southeast this weekend . southeast this weekend. meanwhile the national energy
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action charity warns the rising cost of living will leave millions having to pick between living in unheated homes or racking up debt this winter . racking up debt this winter. argentina will play croatia in the world cup semi—finals after beating netherlands on penalties . th beating netherlands on penalties. th as croatia knocked brazil out of the tournament. supporters zagreb jumped for joy at, the final whistle. meanwhile, england are preparing to face reigning champions tomorrow night. captain kane says his team are determined to win into this tournament , hoping and this tournament, hoping and believing that we can it and we've got to a stage now where we've got to a stage now where we expect it to be and now is about trying push on and we face about trying push on and we face a really tough game tomorrow but i know everyone's ready we've and we will go into that with
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yeah maybe more belief in what we did back 2018 and lord young of grantham a cabinet minister who served under conservative leader margaret thatcher has died. the pair was appointed employment secretary in 1985 before becoming trade after the 1987 election. he later served , 1987 election. he later served, as a business adviser to tory prime david cameron, maintaining keen interest in education and youth employment. mrs. thatcher said of lord young authors me problems. david me solutions. he was 90 years . old tv online and was 90 years. old tv online and radio. this is gb news. now it's back to mark dolan tonight. tatiana sanchez. doesn't bring me any problems, only solutions . she's back in an hour's time.
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.she's back in an hour's time. welcome to mark dolan tonight. big stories, big guests and always opinions. don't forget the show starts at the earlier time of pm, right through till 11. every friday and saturday. now in the news agenda with , my now in the news agenda with, my panel now in the news agenda with, my panel. here's a burning question of the day. is it too cold for me? it's not quite cold enough . me? it's not quite cold enough. how will you be staying warm this winter ? relying on your this winter? relying on your radiator . also, does sex stop at radiator. also, does sex stop at sex state. we'll discuss that . sex state. we'll discuss that. and we've got tomorrow's papers exactly 1030 sharp with full panel reaction . and my mark panel reaction. and my mark means guest is nick leeson , the means guest is nick leeson, the original rogue trader who caused the collapse of barings , the collapse of barings, arguably the biggest financial scandal , the 20th century. he is scandal, the 20th century. he is in just a few minutes time. he tells incredible story. he's been to prison for four years, but he's rebuilt life and he's a very, very inspirational guy. but first, it's time for my take it . ten there's an old saying,
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it. ten there's an old saying, cash is king, never that been truer. in 2022 as governments and corporations encourage us to stop using cash notes and coins and instead us to tap with a card or two ways our phone . it card or two ways our phone. it may be convenient. i love a bit of cash less, but it comes with enormous risks. if you at your phone you could waving away your freedoms freedoms . take a look freedoms freedoms. take a look at nigeria example africa's most populous country which will soon limit the of money citizens can withdraw for each day from january . the central withdraw for each day from january. the central bank of nigeria will cap withdrawals from , atms, banks and cash from, atms, banks and cash purchases at £30 a day. this according to reports . according to reports. terrifying. this is part a wider
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campaign at government and corporate level to kill cash altogether . as we saw with altogether. as we saw with creeping covid measures, we will see much the same with how we pay see much the same with how we pay for and services . as with pay for and services. as with the pandemic , the push for the pandemic, the push for a cashless society is an attack on people power. if you have cash, you're spending habits cannot be traced and your funds cannot be frozen in the way they can with a digital currency. don't forget that tinpot dictator justin trudeau canada's grinning tyrant, froze the bank accounts of truckers who were protesting vaccine mandates. he couldn't have done that with cash in terms of a cashless society. all roads lead to china. it's worst case scenario. the end of the wedge . chinese citizens are part wedge. chinese citizens are part of what's called a social credit system in which people's money is controlled digitally by the
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government . they have virtual government. they have virtual money in their virtual bank account access , which is linked account access, which is linked to good behaviour and with facial recognition cameras everywhere. the chinese public can lose access to their money for the most minor indiscretion if is spotted littering or walking home drunk. being up to date with their vaccines is critical of the government or guilty of some other perceived . guilty of some other perceived. this fully digital ized system will punish immediately by stopping paying for goods in the supermarket or from buying a train ticket, for example. welcome to hell a cashless society . the control is society. the control is transferred from the people to corporate nations and the states . and in a cashless society . how . and in a cashless society. how can you give your nephew a ten for their birthday or a couple of pound coins for that? or waitress that you so nicely in cafe? how can you out a homeless
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person that needs a few quid to get by. what about the wonderful of a retired pensioner cleaning your windows or doing a bit of gardening? receiving a cris p £20 gardening? receiving a crisp £20 note as a thank you . a cashless note as a thank you. a cashless society will spell the end of the informal discretionary economy. cash is human. cashless is in human . come rain or shine. is in human. come rain or shine. if you've got physical money, you are secure. we've our personal autonomy by lockdowns stopping you from leaving your house going to work or deciding who , you see. we've had bodily who, you see. we've had bodily autonomy by vaccine mandates . autonomy by vaccine mandates. the state will decide what . goes the state will decide what. goes into your body, not you . and if into your body, not you. and if we allow a cashless society to happen , that will be the end of happen, that will be the end of your financial autonomy. me as well. cash indeed. king always been. always will beware the
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retail outlets , starbucks retail outlets, starbucks branches and others offering the snake oil convenience of cashless payments only and fight at every turn. it's time to put your money where. your mouth is . your money where. your mouth is. a s branches are contactless . you branches are contactless. you cannot pay with cash . i believe cannot pay with cash. i believe this is the shape of things to come. and i think it's a big big worry for our society and for our civil liberties. what's your . mark@gbnews.uk let's get the view of my fantastic panel. we have radio and fleet street legend mike porky parry . we have legend mike porky parry. we have broadcaster , entrepreneur and broadcaster, entrepreneur and show biz queen cundy and the fantasy tech political commentator and journalist , i commentator and journalist, i should add, successful playwright . well. award winning playwright. well. award winning emma burnell. playwright. well. award winning emma burnell . mike, what do you emma burnell. mike, what do you think this a cashless society . think this a cashless society.
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couple couple of years ago i just said no it's outrageous and you know you you can't me into just only producing a piece of plastic and then covid came along and now you barely find me with any cash about me. i do still carry 30 or 40 quid in a here or there or whatever . but here or there or whatever. but mostly speaking i don't pay for anything these days unless . it's anything these days unless. it's on plastic. but one thing i do like to have cash is to give a cab driver a £5 or a £10 tape on top of what i paid on the card. but excuse , man, he choked on on but excuse, man, he choked on on the fact that i'm this name. i know using the words tip makes you physically. yes it did really well. sorry. what's a tip that's free money. but now what i'm saying , i that's free money. but now what i'm saying, i think it's a brilliant way to run an efficient society . well, you efficient society. well, you don't have to carry cash . and don't have to carry cash. and the one thing i always about
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cash more was how dirty made your fingers you know pound notes , £5 notes coins . i don't notes, £5 notes coins. i don't want to do that anymore. okay so i am totally into the cashless society . also, remember that society. also, remember that crime can be out if bank don't have to rob banks anymore . get have to rob banks anymore. get money. it's not there . yes, money. it's not there. yes, you're quite right about how filthy cash notes are. i once sniffed a tenner and i got quite giddy . emma sniffed a tenner and i got quite giddy. emma but now what's your view about cashless society? because i just, i just worry that it's going to create this awful corporate world in which our money is this abstract thing. i mean, i think if worried about the creation of a corporate world, you're a little behind the curve very live in a highly corporatized and i'd never use cash if i'm honest i use it for one thing, one thing
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only. and that's paying for the tip in a restaurant because do worry there are some very restaurant owners who take that. if you put on your card. but if you put it on your card. but if you put it on your card. but i for everything with phone. i pay for everything with phone. i pay for everything with phone. inever i pay for everything with phone. i never take my purse out anymore. it's not i take a load of cards. my has my bank card on it i check my banking app, everything . good morning. when everything. good morning. when i wake up to think what needs to go in today what is to go out today. i it a much much today. i find it a much much manageable system and, a better way of managing my personal finances. be honest. yeah. cundy my concern is , canada. and the my concern is, canada. and the fact that justin trudeau, who's a deeply undemocratic figure, in my view , was able to freeze the my view, was able to freeze the bank accounts of canadian truckers who simply didn't want to be forced to have a vaccine and. that's my worry. mark cash is king. as napoleon said, we are a nation of shopkeepers. so should be in control of our own money. and i love dollars. he had it under the floorboards and that's what i honestly that is the way to do it be a better
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chancellor than the one we've got. now, let's be honest. yeah, but let's think. look, i live in a rural area. i don't always a good signal, you know, you can't use card, look at the use your card, look at the elderly , they're not very good elderly, they're not very good with technical. they prefer to deal people in low deal in cash people in low incomes, to in cash. a incomes, prefer to in cash. a lot of the time . and that's what lot of the time. and that's what we've worry . i'm sorry. we've got to worry. i'm sorry. let's not be governed by the state we want to be our own boss. we'll come back to this. let me know your mark@gbnews.uk the papers at exactly 1030 sharp. otherwise i'll be in big trouble with producer greg can set your watch to it but next what a booking well done to the team. nick leeson is live on the program the man that literally broke the bank he tells his story . broke the bank he tells his your voice heard to email me down at gbnews.uk. our poll running that the results after
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the . star on netflix. there's been no rush to hire for some major movie or anything . so she's movie or anything. so she's become chippy along comes harry. slightly dim . former army slightly dim. former army officer . i'd slightly dim. former army officer. i'd like to know slightly dim. former army officer . i'd like to know how officer. i'd like to know how much of a great leader he was. right. and suddenly it's all
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next well done to a new member. the team arc has joined our team of directors here at gb news. let me tell you, he's got sebastian sweating. it's time now . this sweating. it's time now. this yes, indeed . mates in which yes, indeed. mates in which i speak to the biggest names in the world of politics showbiz, sports and beyond . tonight, the sports and beyond. tonight, the man who broke bank. nick leeson, is a former derivatives trader whose fraudulent, unauthorised and speaking trades resulted in the 1995 collapse of barings bank. the 1995 collapse of barings bank . the united kingdom's bank. the united kingdom's oldest bank. leeson was convicted of financial crime in singapore, and served four years in changi . he has since turned in changi. he has since turned his life around completely moved on from the scandal is now an in—demand public speaker and a consultant for. in—demand public speaker and a consultant for . various consultant for. various businesses in relation to and corporate responsibility . it's corporate responsibility. it's an incredible story which
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spawned two bestselling books and a starring you mcgregor. i'd always hoped ewan mcgregor would play always hoped ewan mcgregor would play me at some point . nick play me at some point. nick leeson welcome to gb news remarkable great to have you on the program congratulations on having completely reinvented yourself. it's been a journey. we'll start with an easy question. what happens happens ? question. what happens happens? i don't know how i'm to tell you all of that in just one minute. isuppose all of that in just one minute. i suppose it's i don't know. it was a combination of my own stupidity, a lot of incompetence and negligence on the part of others , some excessive risk others, some excessive risk taking , no systems, no control , taking, no systems, no control, nobody overseeing what was going and may not been to put my hand up and ask for help and advice and at vice people what was happening and managed to conceal a loss that was growing and growing about a three and a half year period so essentially there was this issue the business
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within the bank that were these massive losses that they were not readily , readily available . not readily, readily available. the senior management, it wasn't clear how bad things were . were clear how bad things were. were you doing this for personal gain ? no, absolutely . i mean, i ? no, absolutely. i mean, i think through throughout the, you know, near three year period that i was in singapore, i was just trying to get the losses back and hopefully on with my life. that was always the intention and at and you know as you see with a lot of these stories you just think yourself deeper and deeper into the that you've started to create and you know failed some tests of my bafic know failed some tests of my basic and honesty and integrity early on didn't do the thing that i was supposed to do as i said didn't ask for help and advice which would have been so easy and i would have been directed down a different path. and the story have been very, very different. but nick, it's not like you were stealing millions , pounds and shoving it millions, pounds and shoving it into secret bank account.
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into a secret bank account. that's not the way that we can characterise story . no, not characterise this story. no, not at all. no i mean, no money was stolen it's all it was all lost trading the market through that excessive risk taking and speculation that i was doing dunng speculation that i was doing during that. but period of time. but the one thing that i couldn't cope with was was my own failure and admitting that i was failing . you know, i to be was failing. you know, i to be successful i up during the big bangin successful i up during the big bang in the city of london then it was all about you know following that and being as successful you possibly could be. and for period of time i was. but you know, ultimately, when things started to go wrong i hit my own level of incompetence you like and deal with it appropriately and for that reason it will always be the most embarrassing period of my life but one you know that i'm going to be constantly reminded about. i think there was a google alert this week that it was 27 years ago that i
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was sentenced six and a half years in prison . so you can years in prison. so you can never ignore it . fortunate. was never ignore it. fortunate. was there any financial motivation ? there any financial motivation? i mean, what you chasing or protecting bonuses? or was it really predominantly about your pnde?l really predominantly about your pride? i it was predominantly about pride . mean there's about pride. mean there's always, you know, the criticism that you were taking a salary, you were taking bonuses is completely correct. right. and so was paid bonuses during dunng so was paid bonuses during during two years of that. but that wasn't the reason for continuing going you know, it was simply that i tell the people around that i was failing, you know , was buying failing, you know, was buying into the success , whether that into the success, whether that was family friend or people that i worked with, people i worked for and. you develop this status that becomes far too important for you. and letting those status relationships fall apart is just much. i, status relationships fall apart isjust much. i, i status relationships fall apart is just much. i, i wrote status relationships fall apart isjust much. i, i wrote a book is just much. i, i wrote a book with a psychologist a number
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years ago and. he talks about status i always talk about success because that's way that iused success because that's way that i used to think about it. success because that's way that i used to think about it . but he i used to think about it. but he ends the first chapter with the statement an immature person has status. they'll do anything , status. they'll do anything, absolutely anything to protect it. and i think that embodies a lot what i did during that time. i just couldn't let that status go and own up to. what was what was really happening . yes. what was really happening. yes. what you were a young and i guess, you were a young and i guess, you know, young men always have bit of an ego, especially in world of finance. and you becoming a bit of a legend , the becoming a bit of a legend, the golden boy. and you didn't want to that go. can understand to that go. i can understand completely how that would be a trap . if you're a bit trap. if you're a bit emotionally immature , all young emotionally immature, all young people are . can you tell me people are. can you tell me about the day when it all came crashing down? your emotions ? crashing down? your emotions? yeah. well, look mean. that's the first time that i've really had to confront it. somebody come into the office . i come into the office. i performed a very simple reconciliation that should have
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been done single day for the three years prior to that. but this the first time that it's been done, there's no way to it away. there's a huge in terms of the positions that we run in in singapore . and it becomes very singapore. and it becomes very much fight or flight. so i'm in singapore i that i'm going to be punished quite excessively in singapore i don't know quite what that's going to be . and i what that's going to be. and i tried to get away from singapore and to a location where i start to work that out . you know, some to work that out. you know, some people a question i often get asked is, was there a sense of relief when you got caught and, you know , i think the you know, you know, i think the you know, the usual answer that people would give is that, yes, there was there was always another battle that you had to fight. i you know, i was then in prison in germany and then i was going to be going back to singapore. so there were always other things to focus off, focus on. it wasn't really the relief that some people might think it was.
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you know, there was always else to have to deal with , come to to have to deal with, come to terms with, which was all new to me. you know, this was this was the time, obviously i've the first time, obviously i've beenin the first time, obviously i've been in a situation like that. and you know, incarcerated in germany for nine months and then for three and a half years in singapore was. yes, which was really tough. yeah. singapore jails, don't have air jails, they don't have air conditioning, do they not. they don't have a great deal of anything, to be honest with. you know, they're very clean, but you sleep on floor. it's very rough and uneven . and the three, rough and uneven. and the three, six foot by nine foot three people sleep in the cell . you people sleep in the cell. you know, the toilet. there's a hole in the floor . know, the toilet. there's a hole in the floor. food's not particularly good, but, you know, it's i'm not looking for any sympathy in that regard , you any sympathy in that regard, you know, you have to if you're willing to take a chance or commit a crime, then have to be you have to be accepting of did prison you anything . and i think
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prison you anything. and i think it was a time where i had a long, hard look at myself and really pulled back the veneer. i came to the conclusion that i didn't particularly like myself . i didn't like the way that i reacted in situation prior to that. so you know, starting from a base point to try and improve from that point forward, i think the only thing that it probably taught me that time was the power of community nation and being able to , you know, have being able to, you know, have that long, hard look at yourself . you know, i wasn't a conversation with somebody else in the prison because me in the pages of a of a diary that was keeping at that time but it was a good to stop and i think from that point i became a better communicator. i think the only thing prison taught me from , the thing prison taught me from, the time i spent in there is , time that i spent in there is, you know, you lost all control . you know, you lost all control. so you told what time to get so you got told what time to get , to eat, what time to , what time to eat, what time to do whatever you were doing dunng do whatever you were doing during particular day. you locked for 23 of the locked up for 23 hours of the day, which is which is as well.
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and that you quickly learn that there's things life you can influence, things that you can't influence. very much you influence. i'm very much you need focus on things that need to focus on the things that you and forget about you influence and forget about others. well think that this is ultimately a deeply story. yes you made an enormous mistake but there were factors outwith your control including a senior management asleep at the wheel so you know i don't think you should be held exclusively culpable and you've rebuilt your life and you're now in demand business. speaker an adviser and you can find out more about amazing story at nick leeson .com which is his website thanks nick catch up again sometime thank you very much what of course brilliant stuff. there you go. what a story. course brilliant stuff. there you go. what a story . next course brilliant stuff. there you go. what a story. next up, we got the papers live uninterrupted with full panel reaction. and blimey, there are some big stories there. and in the news agenda , is it too cold? the news agenda, is it too cold? and does sex stop at 60. see you in a second .
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in a second. break tom bower and samantha markle on the way. but ann widdecombe is tonight's outsider . box says tonight's outsider. box says judean barons see hell bent on right. and suddenly it's all started. it's great news for her, right? she stays at the front of it. she can start a career. she can say everybody's a racist. she can come to a foreign country and say, oh, look, it's much better in the
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it is 1030. and it's time now for tomorrow's papers off the press. as always , 1030 every press. as always, 1030 every saturday and sunday and friday as well. so let's have a look at the daily express. and they lead with she expressed. yes, it is patronising fury over attack queen's life's work . harry patronising fury over attack queen's life's work. harry and meghan have been accused of tarnishing late queen's legacy by.the tarnishing late queen's legacy by. the commonwealth's newest member nation gabon's . it was member nation gabon's. it was surprising and patronising for the couple to use netflix series to attack the organisation was queen elizabeth's proudest achievement. the country's high commissioner to the uk criticised comments about . the
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criticised comments about. the 2.0 captain harry. we can do this is the other story in the daily express. next up, the guardian. bully boy barkley is to blame for nurses strike according to a top union boss. the leader of britain's union has accused the health secretary, steven barclay, of being a bully who is unwilling to negotiate with her because she's a woman , a largely female she's a woman, a largely female workforce . pat cullen also , the workforce. pat cullen also, the government was displaying particularly behaviour towards the royal college of nursing because she believes it sees nursing as female work. that it does not value properly . blimey, does not value properly. blimey, that's pretty controversial. look to debating that with my panel. look to debating that with my panel . the independent. can panel. the independent. can england stop mbappe . also huge england stop mbappe. also huge mistake to up a bank rules. hunt warned architect of banking reforms to prevent a repeat of the 2008 financial crisis has warned that jeremy hunt's relaxation of his rules could rebound on us very badly. sir john vickers reprimand came as
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the chancellor was accused of a race . the bottom on regulation race. the bottom on regulation in a bid to restore competitiveness as lost since brexit unravelling bank industry is a huge mistake, said john. the weekend winter crisis erupts . after years of warnings, paramedics a&e doctors and finance experts give a frightening snapshot of a health service where even the seriously cannot rely on an ambulance . i'm cannot rely on an ambulance. i'm afraid the service will collapse. one paramedic tells the newspaper . collapse. one paramedic tells the newspaper. i'm waiting for the newspaper. i'm waiting for the day. they have to say to people. sorry. unless you're in cardiac arrest can't come. doctors are concerned about paediatric care with significantly numbers of kids going through a&e with respiratory problems . year. respiratory problems. year. blimey. i have lockdowns aren't to do with that . next up, the to do with that. next up, the sun now make french toast, lads and a wonderful effigy . harry and a wonderful effigy. harry kanein and a wonderful effigy. harry kane in a slice of toasted white bread . we are very creative bread. we are very creative spirits aren't we? let's be
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honest. it's no less chocolate . honest. it's no less chocolate. yeah, yeah. no, i. i'm not one of those people who doesn't. and you've drafted a few headlines in your. yeah you speak with authority. all right talk about headunesin authority. all right talk about headlines in a second. the daily . yes we can world cup le crunch gareth . the lads have the belief gareth. the lads have the belief to win the daily telegraph strikes will see 15,000 operations cancelled also christmas cards won't arrive february leaving . so there you february leaving. so there you go. thanks for the hints for reminder. that's why aquarius sci fi season won't go down. but i'm smarter . sci fi season won't go down. but i'm smarter. the sci fi season won't go down. but i'm smarter . the thing sci fi season won't go down. but i'm smarter. the thing we've got in common, i'm very smart and i sent a major christmas card last wednesday and. i know that at least six of them have got there because. i've had a message saying thank you very much for your christmas card. yeah well, i've to say. yeah they're i've got to say. yeah they're waiting. yeah, yeah . well comes waiting. yeah, yeah. well comes out. we've got the times now i'd
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like to deliver mine personally to you. misery on the railways every month. i mean, the every day a month. i mean, the headunes every day a month. i mean, the headlines don't get better. they strikes an overtime ban. new warning be warning rail services will be disrupted at least disrupted every day for at least four because of strikes four weeks because of strikes and overtime ban. passengers and an overtime ban. passengers being warned network rail said service would be limited overcrowded or cancelled until mid january. what a shocker. the daily star record numbers to watch england win game of two halves. 50% of us will watch crunch game versus france whilst the other 30 million do goodness knows what . back to me if you knows what. back to me if you don't mind for a ask because if you're not sure what you're going to do , you'll be watching going to do, you'll be watching mark dolan tonight. going to do, you'll be watching mark dolan tonight . yes indeed, mark dolan tonight. yes indeed, because we're on air from eight till 11, so would be the second half. so what i'm is england have either won it by time or they've completely lost it . but they've completely lost it. but either way, what you do is tune in to mark dolan tonight and then you've got football on in then you've got football on in the background, maybe radio the background, maybe the radio or ipad but make sure you or on the ipad but make sure you tune in. could be penalties. and
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then i'll i'll live then i'll do i'll do live commentary and i'll do gary lineker out of a game. okay. you know, this will only second television. we've all got to television. we've all got to television. that's that's it television. that's it. that's it so about freedom of so it's all about freedom of choice. by way, there are choice. and by way, there are lots people that don't like lots of people that don't like football and it will be a joy to have your company that first have your company for that first houn have your company for that first hour. forget the hour. and don't forget the game's by about game's completely over by about so a nine till 11. so do lock in a nine till 11. we've got some great great content fact game's over by content and fact game's over by game's eight no by nine game's by eight no by nine i think by noon on there's extra time. it's a tottenham supporter , you get to sit at last , not , you get to sit at last, not least the daily mail, and they lead with the following week of strikes holding hostage don't fall ill , strikes holding hostage don't fall ill, don't rely on trains and forget sending christmas cards and also marie colvin. i've had eight mistakes me a very, very courageous article there from the model and i think of sort of eighties and nineties popular culture a very nice, very nice lady as well, popular culture a very nice, very nice lady as well , the very nice lady as well, the seventies even. right brilliant stuff. she still looks fab and
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those your front pages . so let's those your front pages. so let's get reaction now to stories from emma burnell, lizzie cundy and mike porky parry . and we are we mike porky parry. and we are we are chock full of stories we quickly talk about headlines we start, if we can, a little jolly how much work by mike porky parry goes into the drafting of a headline . you said that the a headline. you said that the sun newspaper is headline you don't understand it now make french toast lads with image of harry kane on a slice dice i'll think it's confusing because as lizzie pointed out before may does not mean we're toast . does not mean we're toast. toast? who's toast what's the point? they're trying to it should be much clearer you know what sometimes you can just be too clever in trying to put something different on your from . if you make someone toast you're basically defeating them aren't you. yeah i said it. so we're making the french toast. yeah. does it need a comma ? no, yeah. does it need a comma? no, but hang on. isn't the general expression you do that to me .
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expression you do that to me. you're toast. that means you're the loser . okay, so now the the loser. okay, so now the argument is england and. they're making the french the loser by you we're going to make the french. but he's on the he's on the front of the piece. yeah. oh yeah. the front of the piece. yeah. oh yeah . because how doesn't know yeah. because how doesn't know harry you . oh cut to the harry you. oh cut to the forwards is on the piece of toast and toast means lose so i just don't get it it's why is why the sun circulation has gone a south lately. do you know that newspapers these days don't even pubush newspapers these days don't even publish their circulation figures anymore because they're so low ? because newspapers are so low? because newspapers are dying? i have to sit here and admit that i was the man responsible for calling graham taylor turnip head. i love , i taylor turnip head. i love, i designed it now. he was the manager the time. yeah. how can we remember which world cup that was? midnight. it wasn't even a world cup. we were losing qualifying games, and i put his face in the middle of a turnip and turnip tiger. mike, can i ask why? turn it 93. 93. it was.
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yeah because i was told the edhonif yeah because i was told the editor, if you don't come something rather special , then something rather special, then i'll find somebody else . yeah, i'll find somebody else. yeah, absolutely. actually funny enough. yeah it wasn't. it was fine. we got one, we lost the next game we got . next game we got. a disappearing. this is a horrible look into bucket of manure . oh, look into bucket of manure. oh, to make it even worse was terrible, by the way. i didn't do. i can't do it. i can't. terrible, by the way. i didn't do. i can't do it. i can't . all do. i can't do it. i can't. all these all these headlines sometimes. cruel emma. i mean, we had liz truss as the letters, didn't we? i loved the letters. i i have been. i'm going give you a little background information. i've in the room in which liz left is her disco. no last night. stars starstruck. i do the hokey should take credit for the letters because it is the you set the precedent of politician public figure. yeah. within a vegetable . well, it was
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within a vegetable. well, it was a no, i don't think we did it. don't know. we never had a pubuc don't know. we never had a public figure in a vegetable but we know i did poke on this but i'm and by the way, in a light by the way, a company. yeah, that's right. well, the last person at least britain did a piece the likes. that was the piece of the likes. that was the front page. a couple of years later. a couple of years later, i work with green after world cup. i think probably german . 26 cup. i think was probably german. 26 never revealed of course i was the god he was i don't know i never told me headline can story and said yes it sets the national undecided does the headune national undecided does the headline has it. oh it does for instance the most famous of all time and it's letters james culligan gets off a plane, a reporter walks up to him and mr. collagen the country in a terrible you know he never said crisis what crisis system but his response don't put your country down and so they they
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just invented crises. what crisis and that stuck with james that's a headline can the headunes that's a headline can the headlines really can set the agenda we all they the newspapers themselves all having less and less influence and that's part of the media is massively but they also have a huge influence what dan wootton did with max it that was his line and they brought it up . the line and they brought it up. the documentary. yeah, kind of blaming it believable scape. it was amazing script but that was down to dan and he does it on his show mondays thursdays 911 every night now we've got him at gb news and i just wonderjust on this issue the world cup. yeah mike used to be the chief press officer at the they have ball association i'm detecting much world cup fever in this country at the moment. well you know what we had a conversation which you set expectations go massively overboard i it's
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coming up now have you noticed that before this world cup how many why vans were driving around with the flag of st flying from them. i i haven't seen what, i haven't seen what before. all previous tournament cab drivers , white van man, cab drivers, white van man, private , all the flags flying . private, all the flags flying. but this time we thought no , but this time we thought no, it's in the autumn so it's not like getting on beach, not in the in the back gardens and all that. and b we don't think we've got a chance and see do we really to win a world cup in a country like qatar where there are so many questions about whether it should have been there and who are the people who are running ? well, let's be are running? well, let's be honest, it shouldn't be in a horrific human rights and what they do to the guy. i i will i will absolutely excited if we get through this . i know. get through this. i know. exactly roaring that. but i think the problem i'll be roaring on my own in my own
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living room. whereas i know if it was the summer i'd be going out the clock, watching it on a big screen. yeah, that's really missing. yes, i totally agree. in the middle of the football, which very know and i've been which is very know and i've been to i've been three cups to i've been to three world cups very, i was asked very, luckily, but i was asked if i could turn i wouldn't on the principle. i think go. the principle. yeah, i think go. that's tell you i was that's right. i tell you i was off the jobs to go and report with the fans and all that. i said no. lots more from the next will public turn on the is will the public turn on the is going on strike especially if christmas is ruined . people christmas is ruined. people can't get treated in nhs and is it too cold? are you struggling and also to sex stop at 60 we'll discuss all of that and lots more stories. the papers . judean barons see hell bent on wrecking our third christmas in a row as hospitality bosses say almost a third of party bookings have now been cancelled due to
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rmt strikes. faced with a growing winter of discontent, rishi sunak is scrambling to introduce new legislation that would ensure minimum service levels during strike action . would ensure minimum service united states. i've lived in the united states. i've lived in the united states. i've lived in the united states . it is not much united states. it is not much better . there is shock. shock
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three break we've got emma burnell we've got lizzie cundy and mike porky parry . i think and mike porky parry. i think you'll agree it's getting pretty cold isn't it. britain is known for chilly winter weather they get your blankets at the ready we expect it to get even colder will see at least seven days of arctic weather in which temperatures could go as low as minus ten. whilst london expected to have four inches of snow fall within days . so it snow fall within days. so it begs the question , is it too begs the question, is it too cold, lazy candy ? it's called cold, lazy candy? it's called winter mark. i'm sorry. i know we were told it's a period of global warming . there you go. global warming. there you go. yeah. but isn't the point of global warming that you get colder winters? yes. yes, exactly. greenhouse effect in reverse. let me tell . what we're reverse. let me tell. what we're worried about is energy prices going up and the house is not being, you know, insulation. i don't i think it's cold enough now. i've i've got a fantastic overcoat. i mean, what are some fantastic me 1600 pounds because it's very and it's got lightning
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inside . i wake up every morning inside. i wake up every morning is it minus is down minus two three. i think that's what at 8:00 i put my overcoat on and i go out and i have breakfast because i want cold to be protected by my overcoat. it's the world's best overcoat. and i only wear it over last three years on average , five days a years on average, five days a years on average, five days a year.i years on average, five days a year . i want years on average, five days a year. i want to wear it. i want to wear it. don't see the cash to wear it. i don't see the cash there . but hey, latvian virgins there. but hey, latvian virgins . no, it's made from that stuff . goats give you for your scarf. what's it called? brioche man . what's it called? brioche man. schmidt's cashmere wedge . 5000 schmidt's cashmere wedge. 5000 wedge pate. wedge. all that money . you go some posh outlet money. you go some posh outlet outfit. wasn't inverness, was it. no i thought. i think me and primeau wanted to resign. i think it was literally row where i go. well, let me tell you, he's very generous. he bought me go and then my barry. you've
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worked hard the akash cash the good to you do you have any tncks good to you do you have any tricks for staying? staying warm? because i know people are really worried about heating their homes. no more. you get me? no. i want to stay cold. so, for instance, my next property investment will be estonia. because i'm not going to go through another august we've had this year. i'm to push off to estonia for a month. okay. i was going to push off to the shetlands and then said it's very boring in the shetlands. you couldn't last a month there. okay, i've been to latvia and lithuania before the baltic . i lithuania before the baltic. i like the temperature there . i'm like the temperature there. i'm going to buy property in estonia and stay there in august. i like to be told you be considered an illegal immigrant, that you think no because i've got loads of dosh anybody who will drive them you don't think you'd get so bundled into the back of a van and sent home or something. now i'd make sure that people after me, you know, what they'd have just take one have to do. they just take one glance at your cv that they'll something else at the turnip
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head. do you have any tricks for staying warm? because my mind wants to be all the time. wants to be called all the time. many my view nervous about many of my view is nervous about how warm. we because how to stay warm. we because i've tell we're not i've got to tell you, we're not using central heating and we're close to breaking now. but listen , got close the listen, we've got to close the curtains, sure got curtains, make sure got a jumper, a dressing on, just jumper, put a dressing on, just keep warm and it's common sense . yeah. we don't need a government advertised campaign trade. if you've got an electric blanket and lecture bank. it's great, but water bottle losing exercise keeps you warm. i mean, do you? what? do you go to bed with something hot lizzie? i did this morning lo say how about you enjoy visiting this is a family show stay warm i'm really odd because i absolutely don't mind being cold outside but as soon as in yeah it's me i'm nice, right? i can't relax . if nice, right? i can't relax. if my feet get cold, they stay . so my feet get cold, they stay. so that said, i always make sure that said, i always make sure that i'm wearing socks. i've got big woolly of slipper socks. i keep on. i have a blanket on my
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sofa permanently. a layer of layers is the answer quickly. if you are a woman of my hat, you keep when you get out you get cold. yeah one trick that we did last year is that we just had this one radiator in the living room. so if we're watching telly, we have on and we telly, we have that on and we actually lie against and actually lie up against it and you can put feet on there you can like put feet on there and you get knife can almost and you get a knife can almost say know you should put say you know you should put silver foil paper behind write about because that bounces about this because that bounces the heat back into the room correct and that was a trick given to me where bobble hat always works and. when went to always works and. when i went to football, always be warm football, i'd always be warm with body in one with the only put my body in one and half. yeah well, and a half. yeah well, apparently so. but one one. the best way to stay warm is to have coat but it just doesn't coat on, but it just doesn't feel a coat feel right. wearing a coat i call. where? a cover coat when driving or when i'm indoors. it's just too restricting. it's just it's too restricting. it's just it's too restricting. i agree. and know, i totally agree. and you know, if a pub and the if you go into a pub and the roaring log fire, it's beautiful but it feasible. but if you go to pub, it's cold. i can't to a pub, it's cold. i can't there drinking a pint beer there drinking a pint of beer with it's not like with my coat. it's not like being the pub, you know.
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being in the pub, you know. i like harry. there is one way to stay warm and that is a number of ways to stay. well, let me tell me, please. camera 27. tell you me, please. camera 27. oh i can wait. why not have sex . well, 58 year old journalist monica saltzman says that after menopause, she wants to have sex again. oh meanwhile, loose women star linda robson pondered when she said that her and her husband can't bothered as they're too old. so begs the question, does sex stop at 60? i don't know who to ask first. really? because none you are. well, i've got this piece here you've been taught about is it a new spy? good. it's good. yeah, well, it's very interesting. and want gary lineker very , famous want gary lineker very, famous man. he wrote a piece this year in which she said i'm most famous now the two most things i most enjoyed in life was scoring goals and having sex . at 62, goals and having sex. at 62, i'll probably never do either again , which i thought was
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again, which i thought was a very candid admission from a bloke who is you know very famous. well, guys, it is i'm interested. i'm still and not without is surely will you still be will still get your leg over. well, i'm telling you now in the age since i've been 40 i've had more sex and then in the 25 years i was sexually active before it and have no intention of slowing down time soon. wow. no i think it's good. that's why you don't need the heating on it you don't need the heating on it you those those that sort of off those with socks slip they take them off they come up with that you can stay on but everything else comes. absolutely. yeah, just the slippers . you can leave just the slippers. you can leave your hats on. i can leave my slippers on. you could generate your own electricity in your house. good luck on the national my hanging up your. house. good luck on the national my hanging up your . oh you got my hanging up your. oh you got more experience you know like you don't you don't exactly. exactly. it's not yeah it's not just more sex is better never too old to switch. i mean, you're a man of appetite. but
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but i just wonder whether for you now at this stage in your career, you know, you're busy with your periodicals, aren't you, other course know you, any other course you know you, any other course you know you like to retire the you to you like to retire to the whole story you go through. i think made my and i go think i've made my and i go there's no time this is not a time for nooky have you. well always time all those i would life very busy. okay and i believe that if you're going to get into it get down to it got to concentrate on it go. i think you probably would you rather have a cup of tea. that's a famous quote wasn't it. listen you've made the statement quite recently you about your you know , to keep physical for any is day. and i admire you for that enormously and can i tell you i don't have friends ringing me up and saying have you got these you these number and i said to myself she's a wonderful woman leave her alone let me tell you full disclosure back before we let you go would sleep with all
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my panel preferably at the same time there because it's i did come back saying thanks for your your emails and my great guests we'll do it all tomorrow we'll do it all again tomorrow eight and people's house eight and the people's house then. eight and the people's house then . hello it's aidan mcgivern then. hello it's aidan mcgivern here from the met office. it stays cold. the weekend ice , stays cold. the weekend ice, snow and fog for some , but for snow and fog for some, but for many others, clear skies by nights and crisp winter sunshine by day we still got air in place across the uk and we still got low pressure in the north sea helping to maintain some showers. but it's mainly wind wood coast where we see those showers so that that for friday night it's northern scotland in spots northern ireland western and wales the showers coastal level will be spray and sleet perhaps some hail but and with any elevation falling snow covering for snow day only for example for high parts of cumbria and certainly a lot of snow building up for northern now parts of the northern where we see some clear spells overnight could dip to as low as
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minus lower and for much minus ten or lower and for much of the uk . so widespread frost of the uk. so widespread frost and some freezing fog patches to wake up to as well. that fog will be slow to clear poor visibility and, 1 to 2 spots continuing into the afternoon also there's icy to watch out for early saturday in the west and the north a cold day to come for all of us 1 to 3 celsius typically and below freezing where we've got the fog persisting and where we've got any higher parts now into saturday nights the fog and the frost will widely reform and so another cold night there'll be increased risk of some showers feeding into southeast scotland. parts covering inland here, some significant snow over the hills and certainly in the north and the west that continues be that risk of icy patches as we of sunday it's freezing fog patches especially for southern and central parts of the uk most of these will disperse by the afternoon but some will continue and then a signal for some more signify snow perhaps to affect
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study. so the revealed importance of the internet to radicalisation. so in 2013, if you go back like this is this is less than ten years, less than half, 43% of those in prison for terrorism were radicalised online. and that figure rose to 92% over 2019 to 2021. i mean , 92% over 2019 to 2021. i mean, obviously, that includes 92% over 2019 to 2021. i mean, better. there is shock. shock in areas where minority communities live altogether in in a lot of degrees of difficulty . that is degrees of difficulty. that is not the same as over here. over
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good evening. i'm sanchez in the gb newsroom, a child with a suspected case of strep a has died . sussex, bringing the total died. sussex, bringing the total number deaths in the uk to 16. the uk health security agency confirmed child was a student at park school. it says it's working with brighton and hove city council as well as the school to raise awareness of the signs and symptoms . thousands of signs and symptoms. thousands of royal mail workers have walked off the job in a new wave of strikes. more than hundred and 15,000 people rallied outside
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