tv Headliners GB News January 8, 2023 11:00pm-12:01am GMT
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hi there. good evening i'm howard armstrong in the gb newsroom the duke sussex has accused his family getting into bed with the devil to rehabilitate their image and accused the king of sacrificing harry's interests in favour of his own . in harry's interests in favour of his own. in his first harry's interests in favour of his own . in his first broadcast his own. in his first broadcast interview promoting his controversial memoir on itv, prince harry insisted family have been briefing the press for well over decade, including stories about him and meghan. he also accused senior royals of being complicit in pain and suffering. he and meghan were experiencing. and in the conflict media created, you know for the last however many years.
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let's just focus the last six years. the level of planting and leaking from other members of the family means that in my mind have written countless books . have written countless books. certainly millions of words have been dedicated to trying to trash my and myself to the point where i had to leave my country country . well, prince harry also country. well, prince harry also says he is 100% sure there can be a reconciliation with the royal family despite the accusations in his memoir but says an olive branch has not been extended . well, they've been extended. well, they've shown absolutely no willingness to reconcile . up until this to reconcile. up until this point , and to reconcile. up until this point, and i'm not sure how honesty is burning bridges if prime minister has indicated he's willing to address nurses demands for more money and has declined rule out reopening this year's pay deal. speaking to the rishi sunak accepted the is under enormous pressure. strikes
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by nurses and ambulance drivers are scheduled to go ahead later this month. however, the royal college of nursing urged downing street to meet the union halfway in its demand for a 19% pay rise . hundreds of supporters , . hundreds of supporters, brazil's former far right president, higher bolsonaro, have invited the country's congress, supreme court and palace. it comes week after the inauguration of . brazil's new inauguration of. brazil's new left , president lula da silva. left, president lula da silva. bolsonaro's extremist supporters are refusing to accept he lost election, drawing comparisons with the january six storm of the us capitol following donald trump's defeat. president lula says the rioters will be held accountable . ukraine's dismissed accountable. ukraine's dismissed accountable. ukraine's dismissed a russian claim that its forces killed hundred ukrainian troops . the eastern city of kramatorsk . moscow claimed their had buildings serving as temporary accommodation for ukrainian personnel in retaliation for a strike that killed of russian
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soldiers on new year's day . soldiers on new year's day. local residents, though, say buildings were damaged and the mayor of kramatorsk says no casualties been reported . tv casualties been reported. tv onune casualties been reported. tv online and dab . plus radio. this online and dab. plus radio. this is gb news. now it is for headliners . headliners. at tomorrow's papers. i'm your host, mark dolan , and i'm joined by two top dolan, and i'm joined by two top comedians, a very old friend , my comedians, a very old friend, my two old friends of mine, josh and eddie brinson. before we take a deeper into the details, let's take a quick look at tomorrow's front pages. monday's mail. let's take a look at this. we'll just load the image. it's, of course, about prince harry. there's only one show in town , there's only one show in town, andifs there's only one show in town, and it's that explosive
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interview on itv. harry my family helped drive meghan . family helped drive meghan. let's go to the telegraph now . let's go to the telegraph now. william and kate stereotyped. meghan claims as prince harry. monday's are a quarter of adults go to a&e as they can't get appointments . monday's go to a&e as they can't get appointments. monday's guardian now pm looks at a one off cash offer to end nurses strike and got the first uk poster ties with japan to counter threat from china . monday's mirror one from china. monday's mirror one rule for the . rishi and the rule for the. rishi and the metro . rule for the. rishi and the metro . £2.5 million may payday . metro. £2.5 million may payday. monday's daily star cavemen bold cure yabba dabba to and those are your front pages . well let's
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are your front pages. well let's kick off it shall we, with the telegraph, actually. josh, can we start with the mail? prince harry, how do you solve problem like prince harry? well, you just go on and on about it for days and i was hoping that days and then. i was hoping that today the that we today would be the day that we might news. but might have some other news. but this still seems to be it. i will looking the daily will say, looking at the daily mail there's two mail front page, there's two things want to talk about things that i want to talk about before we harry. well, first before we get harry. well, first of kay sort of of all, richard kay is a sort of famous columnist. got bit famous columnist. he's got bit there diana would famous columnist. he's got bit there appalled diana would famous columnist. he's got bit there appalled at diana would famous columnist. he's got bit there appalled at harry's/ould famous columnist. he's got bit there appalled at harry's petty, have appalled at harry's petty, vindictive don't mean vindictive this. i don't mean rich like that can't rich kate, but like that i can't stand . this is what stand this kind. this is what princess di. don't princess di. you don't what princess di. you don't what princess diana have princess diana would have thought on set. quite insightful, actually . yeah, i insightful, actually. yeah, i just that stuff annoys me . just get that stuff annoys me. and is, but and the other thing is, but something a good side we've something on a good side we've got to lose a stone in four weeks we weeks quito dire as we knew we laid we lose a stone and laid it out we lose a stone and for you that's exactly what you did. you stopped eating carbohydrates weight carbohydrates and all the weight just melted off and you got a viral monologue out . i it. viral monologue out. i dig it. and then it all back on. and then i put it all back on. anyway, less about that, but i know why. apparently, i'm told your wife prefers as stuff. your wife prefers as a stuff.
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she does not she does like she she does not like women being attracted me. so ordered the food all so she has ordered the food all to on. basically, she's to go back on. basically, she's threatened newspaper. to go back on. basically, she's threa geted newspaper. to go back on. basically, she's threa get to newspaper. to go back on. basically, she's threa get to what newspaper. to go back on. basically, she's threa get to what they're aper. let's get to what they're saying, harry. family drive saying, harry. my family drive out. meghan . and this is out. meghan. and this is basically obviously the book's coming out in a couple of days, but it's basically seen pretty much everything's in a lot of there's been lot of sort of there's been a lot of sort of it's bilingual spanish english journalists who've had to speed read it over last few days and now finally got to the end of now we finally got to the end of it. we've all the it. we've got all the information. this is nothing new. he's done a he's a tv interview . one of his close interview. one of his close friends and said it's not exactly going to be jeremy paxman, but he's not getting massively challenged here. but there's little interesting there's a few little interesting things first of all, he's things here. first of all, he's saying he supported lady saying how he supported lady lady hussey . that's good. lady hussey. that's good. i think people are of think most people are sort of coming it was coming around to maybe it was slightly overreactive. it forces the former lady in waiting to the former lady in waiting to the queen who asked the lady of africa an origin or of african heritage where she really came from. i think it was just the
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fact that she went on a bit, but it's good he's harry's back her up. he's back rock which is cool. then there's stuff cool. but then there's stuff here a little here that i think is a little bit ridiculous where he's saying , oh, that they drove away and they saw her as like this talking about the prince of wales and princess of wales essentially. and say they saw her as this actress , divorced, her as this actress, divorced, biracial actress . now, i would biracial actress. now, i would argue that take away. who knows what said about this biracial thing and i don't think they said anything like that but if my son rocked up and all my brother or whoever it came up said, you know, i'm dating somebody. yeah, the divorce. the divorce and they're american and they're actress. i'd be like, that's red flags going on there. correct. i mean, honest matches , there are some great actors, but they're also some proper out there . right. and divorce . there. right. and divorce. that's not always a good look. no offence . i can't take you up no offence. i can't take you up on this because my girlfriend knows, obviously on host my
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girlfriend's an actress . knows, obviously on host my girlfriend's an actress. i'll do a bit of acting. i don't want to put her off because i want to keep hold of this one. okay, fair enough. i'll just say, i was specifically about your girlfriend, by the i just girlfriend, by the way. i just is that. pre is very clear about that. pre the days before mrs. dowd the dark days before mrs. dowd and on tinder and the filters on my tinder were divorced oh, you were divorced american. oh, you just missed that you think you did you said. said i. did trouble you said. i said i. i mean, it's a brutal story. it just goes on and on, doesn't it? i feel for him a bit, but i do think there's one thing this album looked this that is album looked on. this is that is the how they might have the driver how they might have thought. bit of thought. she's just a bit of a world. yeah. i mean i look at i look at situation he now finds himself in separate from his family separate , from his mates family separate, from his mates in a different country . i look in a different country. i look at that and just think there's a real control freak there. yeah somewhere along the line and that's just how i it and i, i feel for them both but it's just getting a little bit tedious. yeah, i do feel that harry has essentially been out by this young woman . has he been has he young woman. has he been has he been sort groomed and kidnapped
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she's older than him as child? all i see is he under her spell like that snap . i feel i think like that snap. i feel i think there is a big element of that in this i don't think he's too to get that by and i think i think that he's fallen in love with someone as he wants time and sort of a crown maybe. yes well, he's more than that. and he's few steps away now because he's few steps away now because he's been booted but he's been booted out. but i think there an element of think there is an element of that. but you fall in love with where you fall love, don't where you fall in love, don't you? you do, you've got you? and when you do, you've got back made his his back them up. he's made his his wife. feels like she's being wife. he feels like she's being attacked. she , attacked. yeah. even if she, she's being attacked, whether it's that her it's justified or not that her feelings , know, feelings of that, you know, that's now he's that's that's his job. now he's got step well she's got got to step up. well she's got to look the to right. well, look eddie the telegraph has the same story but a different angle. william and kate stereotype. meghan blames prince harry. well, yeah . think prince harry. well, yeah. think the i mean i think the biggest with this whole situation is that the two ladies don't get on.and that the two ladies don't get on. and when that happens, as you say , you've got to back him. you say, you've got to back him. she's out . even if in private,
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she's out. even if in private, you might think , you know, can you might think, you know, can you might think, you know, can you just sort this out? you've you've got back you mess this up.andi you've got back you mess this up. and i that's the key to this then too don't get on is then too don't get on there is a status is a level of status and i just think one of them can't handle that. well that's right, kate. probably both of them can that that's a bit unfair, say just them. think just one of them. but i think the got the the hierarchy kate's got the hand, right. yes. yeah. but you know what , middleton? it's not know what, middleton? it's not like she's coming. she's royalty herself. know, scum herself. you know, she's scum us. , they're us. yeah. i mean, they're actually married into it, so it's not she's she, you it's not she's like she, you know, maybe came from a very privileged background, she privileged background, but she wasn't like proper royalty and doing all the horses and all that now. she's quite that stuff from now. she's quite savvy she ? she savvy really, isn't she? she wouldn't worried about, wouldn't be worried about, william. she had to get all those tattoos and tight , those tattoos and under tight, correct? yeah. and the nose ring. but how about this then ? ring. but how about this then? yeah, go for it. i'm no, the thing. but this is what does surprise me about bringing it ang surprise me about bringing it bring it in the issue thing. i think it is an issue i think
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it's actually highlighted here because when he says at one stage asked about when they raised concerns about the colour of the skin of the baby. yeah she's right. and he's asked , she's right. and he's asked, didn't you think that was essentially racist ? then he essentially racist? then he says, i wouldn't know. having live within that family , that's live within that family, that's quite a thing, i think. well, yeah , he's sort of saying yeah, he's sort of saying they're so racist . yeah, but they're so racist. yeah, but that's not right. but then he does seem to be bugged tracking later on because in that interview that they with interview that they made with oprah winfrey , they were oprah winfrey, they were basically insinuating that they were or someone had been were racist or someone had been racist of been racist. so now he's sort of been like, oh , not really. i mean, like, oh, not really. i mean, well, just this race, things are a bit all the shop, isn't it? because i mean, i was horrified at the allegation that the royal family remark family had made a racist remark in relation to the baby. and i said at the time, you know, if that's case, needs that's the case, it needs to be investigated. it's not acceptable . then people acceptable. and then some people are whether was a racist are arguing whether was a racist comment or not terms of to comment or not in terms of to just the baby going to just go for the baby going to look a baby, look like look like it's a baby, look like there's different intonation there's a different intonation
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that's your mrs. that's different when your mrs. was pregnant. i i said to was was pregnant. i i said to her, will the baby have glasses? yes. and it made it very painful her and a bit. and the baby the baby are getting to be realised when the baby was born, your little your first child was a little your first child was a little and little girl with glasses and a beard. and i it's been challenging. but this challenging. it's been. but this race is confusing . there's race thing is confusing. there's a clip of meghan markle and in her thirties talking about race in america and how she was made to feel like a foreign person because of the colour of her skin and then more recently she said that the first time race had ever been an issue is she came to this country. this couple do contradict themselves . they were court. the judge . they were in court. the judge would be raising his eyebrows would be raising his eyebrows would well she's on a thousand contradictions. that's the point is the that she says the is the more that she says the more these of more that these kind of weird little come out . little half truths come out. also i'd argue this is a very different country america. different country to america. i think america, people's think in america, people's ethnicity much prominent and ethnicity is much prominent and
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it seems to be less it definitely seems to be less of a factor . what you it definitely seems to be less of a factor. what you just get on with it, you just get on with it. let's get on with the gong. i say that as guy. yeah, i say that as a white guy. yeah, obviously a bit easier. yeah. let's have a look at the now and what have you got us on the what have you got for us on the front page of that particular paper? here, paper? well, the big story here, there's a few first pm looks at one off cash offer to end the strike. so this is an interview that he did this morning with another channel we won't talk about them but station ba ba ba ba ba ba kbc yeah. about them but station ba ba ba ba ba ba kbc yeah . yeah let's ba ba ba kbc yeah. yeah let's give you see they've got ed edging the whole news thing and basically said that he was open to now talking about their wages now pat cullen who's the general of the royal college of nurses before christmas they were she was called in meet the government and basically they haven't they didn't they every she's heard or an interview issues it's really frustrate it after she's like every time she brought up pay they just refused actually with her in any
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actually engage with her in any about it and it seemed like they were trying to pretend oh yeah look the nurses in and look we've the nurses in and we've charged but that's we've charged them but that's not chat about what not they didn't chat about what they about now they needed to talk about now we've through being we've been through chris being for the strikes now it for the letter strikes now it seems like they are open to seems like they are more open to it. big going to are they it. the big going to be are they willing to talk about they're definitely open to 2324 is what they're saying. but are they open to talk about year and this might be their way of fudging it a go. well a little bit where they go. well we you a pay for 2223 we won't give you a pay for 2223 but give you some dosh and but we'll give you some dosh and that will hopefully make up difference see if difference and we'll see if that's enough what sunak do. that's enough what the sunak do. eddie and i think he i you have to value if you want people to go into these areas of work you have to value them and the health service is really really important that these people do as was highlighted through the whole of the pandemic. i know this it keeps coming up, but they just but ever relied on them. everybody came to support them. everybody came to support
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them and the second they start to ask for more money and be valued financially , no, i don't valued financially, no, i don't want to know. and think. i genuinely think if you actually said to people, if we're going to put a penny on income tax to pay for the national service , i pay for the national service, i think most people would go, you know fair they know what, fair enough. they don't even need they've got the money should be giving money they should be giving it to fact is they're to them. and the fact is they're less they did years ago. less than they did years ago. and also that crazy thing is they're probably going to sign this deal that already this deal that was already essentially compromise is essentially the compromise is going scot scotland the going to be in scot scotland the nurses compromise. nurses already had a compromise. they for the strike. and they didn't for the strike. and this is probably the deal they're end up signing they're going to end up signing around sort of 9, io, they're going to end up signing around sort of 9, 10, which is why do it before why they just do it before christmas. now it christmas. why now put it through now? is crazy . through to now? it's is crazy. and other is and and the other thing is and i read a really sort of thread about this it becomes about this is it becomes this sort cycle where gets sort of cycle where it gets worse because more worse and worse because more nurses they feel valued. nurses they don't feel valued. like said, they're to leave like you said, they're to leave the service for them. there's a big problem with nhs like big problem with the nhs like the pensions scheme there's basically less it's not as good as it used to be. so now a lot
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of nurses and my mother in law is a nurse. they quit the nhs, they go an agency way, they get way more money. they don't get the stress and working the same stress and working overtime and all of that stuff . overtime and all of that stuff. and there's no incentive for me .then and there's no incentive for me . then it just makes the situation much, much and situation much, much worse. and that's happening. that's what's been happening. they it's not they need to fix this, it's not really a policy to drive really been a policy to drive people work into people willing to work and into the don't think it's the into no i don't think it's been a policy just rubbish. been a policy just been rubbish. our idea what is. yeah there's two ways looking i think it's two ways of looking i think it's also a policy draw of a also a bit of a policy draw of a drive private health drive towards private health care people is where they care for people is where they basically they is basically what they want is isn't private health care. this isn't private health care. this is like aged yeah. is like aged side. yeah. you mean you mean make the mean patients you mean make the nhs so bad that people just have to go for private uk . okay, well to go for private uk. okay, well look let's finish on another quite interesting medical story. it's to do with the hair on your headin it's to do with the hair on your head in the store well. this is the biggest the most important news maybe we've ever covered on this that basically they're this show that basically they're going to have a cure for baldness by by activating the
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caveman gene, which is what gave us our hair. i don't know about you . i'm excited. are you. are you. i'm excited. are you. are you. i'm excited. are you. are you happy with ? your people side you happy with? your people side myself with this news? yeah. this is the medical we've made on this planet. and yet, until you haven't been able to do this, but this is incredible. if you this caveman gene now , you get this caveman gene now, does that mean that you'll start dragging your around by the hair and essentially being a little. well, i do. my own bedroom is my own business. dragging by hair. because you're jealous of the hair. well maybe she can start dragging us around by the head. are you your opinion are you worried your opinion will quite prehistoric? i will get quite prehistoric? i mean for example, get mean, for example, if you get this caveman gene, you think it's going to trigger other gene? know, bonobo, you might gene? we know, bonobo, you might change become a of brexit you might become a fan of brexit and things that you might get very woke i don't any very anti woke i don't think any amount are going to amount of genes are going to change. think that's going change. i think that's going to have cyborg alter have to be more a cyborg alter thing. but yeah, this is exciting. i would very much like my hair back . exciting. i would very much like my hair back. i exciting. i would very much like my hair back . i feel, you know my hair back. i feel, you know what in all seriousness, i know
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this is pathetic, but it is true , you know, i've made my peace with it. but when start losing your hearing your twenties, there is an element trauma to there is an element of trauma to it, you know? and you know, i've made peace now because . i've, made peace now because. i've, you know, i'm married and happy and, whatever. but if could take and, whatever. but if could take a pill to get it back, would you that or. i was 22 when i lost my hair 22. and i remember in a bar talking to a girl to chat about it so much how'd you go on? and it so much how'd you go on? and it was so hot in the bar all of a sudden, my hair that i had just went, oh, just looked at me and walked off. and it was possibly most depressing moment of life. no i've of my life. yeah no idea. i've never gone . oh, but you're very never gone. oh, but you're very lucky because you, first of all, you look fantastic with it all shakes. they do actually look very. happens very. what happens is that you'll that haven't you'll find that you haven't changed you were 23 now changed since you were 23 now that's the thing about men that lose their hair early they just they just look the same for the whole life. i've got whole of their life. i've got a hairy now though. didn't hairy back now though. i didn't have was doing. have that when i was doing. that's when trying that's nice. when trying to
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start it's not a bad start over. maybe it's not a bad idea is. it it's the. well, i'll tell you we'll we'll have tell you what we'll we'll have a look back of eddie look at the back of eddie brimson next. that's it. so far . joined us in part two, where we rishi acting fishy robot spies from china trying to steal your information and privates soldiers that is see you into .
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welcome back to headline is your first look at tomorrow's papers with me mark dolan tonight. i'm delighted to have the brilliant josh the dungeon master howie and remember to insert nickname brad . now we jump and remember to insert nickname brad. now we jump in and remember to insert nickname brad . now we jump in with brad. now we jump in with monday's guardian and rishi sunak fobbed off a difficult question, saying it's not really relevant . be sure to use that
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relevant. be sure to use that next time i get asked if i've stolen any gb news office suppues. stolen any gb news office supplies. haven't stolen any gb news office supplies . haven't got the what supplies. haven't got the what was it called? stapler i didn't take this right. eddie, what do you think about this? well the guardian revealed in november that sunak was registered with a private practise and guarantees that patients with urgent will be seen on the day yes on the day. do you remember remember the dream? the dream when sneakers were marathons , sneakers were marathons, tottenham last won a trophy careful all those things. they have. we don't go back that long, but. yeah, yeah. i mean , long, but. yeah, yeah. i mean, personally, is it relevant? is you're saying. i think it is because he's a minister and you know, and nhs is quite a big topic . but isn't it one of those topic. but isn't it one of those meaningless gotcha you know, what is the value laura kuenssberg got 12 minutes with the pm and it's this silly trivial stuff about, you know . trivial stuff about, you know. have you ever had private medical insurance ? who cares? medical insurance? who cares? the wards are overflowing . it's the wards are overflowing. it's more about what are you going to do to fix the value in it is the
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if is someone who doesn't use the then he doesn't really the nhs then he doesn't really know what talking and know what he's talking about and pressures they're pressures that they're under. that's i guess that's the anger well i guess it's think quite it's yeah i think that's quite relevant mean most relevant i mean most, most people in businesses people in big businesses have private healthcare. yeah. no, you know so he shouldn't so just answer the question and then and then move on from that. but you just said it's not relevant and don't even make decision without . well, margaret thatcher famously said got private medical and i it she medical insurance and i it she said i pay for this service. i can go in and get out quickly . can go in and get out quickly. she owned sunak she really owned it. sunak doesn't to own what it's like. that's what saying because that's what he's saying because actually that you know, is actually that you know, the is it yes. arguably if he it relevant? yes. arguably if he had something at stake the had something at stake in the system you that his system, if you knew that his kids going to local, kids were going to local, comprehensive , if you comprehensive school, if you knew that he was going to his local nhs hospital , like he local nhs hospital, like he would have investment in there for making sure it's good. but the reality is that actually he can no the state nhs can no the state of the nhs without actually going into the nhs he can still be in formed. i
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i'm informed i have been to the nhs for a year which is really lucky because of you know kids having accidents all that having accidents and all that stuff. i still understand what's going how the nhs in going on and how the nhs in crisis. the question is, as he's sort of pointing out, i would say, it's not relevant to say, yeah, it's not relevant to the of get done. the fact of can he get job done. now more pertinent now that's the more pertinent question i think he should have answered, the way. i think answered, by the way. i think he's have, he's just said, yeah, i have, but think. it's relevant but i don't think. it's relevant here. think now they here. and i think that now they had this weekend had this meeting this weekend basically this basically talking about this crisis. having this crisis. why are they having this meeting weekend? meeting this weekend? he should have they in job. have been they won in the job. cool. those people they had cool. all those people they had together meeting, together in this big meeting, that two, 3:00, that would be one, two, 3:00, then 3 is getting in the then 3 to 5 is getting in the education system. then 5 to 7 doing the police like why do they constantly if it's they constantly do it if it's too ? what? when does he get too late? what? when does he get like muffin or break like a muffin or tea break through to off either through to get them off either muffin the meeting. right muffin in the meeting. all right . lunch. mean, you get . lunch. i mean, do you get like. don't want. a prime like. no, i don't want. a prime minister with, like minister eat lunch with, like a buffet maybe get buffet or something, maybe get view weekend. you can view on the weekend. you can have party actually know have a big party actually know what they're all sort like. what they're all sort of like. he goes does a training he goes and does a training fine. the this but but
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fine. but the but this but but the point is in all seriousness it's always constantly after the fact just get on top of this stuff before you all have a question . answer questions. question. answer questions. don't try , prime minister. we'll don't try, prime minister. we'll move on to the mail now. and here's one pay rise. you don't want eddie. he says how a £1 pay rise could cost you want eddie. he says how a £1 pay rise could cost yo u £14,000. rise could cost you £14,000. tiny jumps can work as rise could cost you £14,000. tiny jumps can work a s £1,000 of tiny jumps can work as £1,000 of income. and then you think . oh, income. and then you think. oh, okay. yeah, that's really interesting . then you interesting. and then if you really own a he refers to people who've got three children and earn over £100,000 a year. now if you earn over earn over £100,000 a year. now if you earn ove r £100,000 a year if you earn over £100,000 a year and you've chosen had three kids, i don't understand why you get a child allowance really , to get a child allowance really, to be fair. yeah. look at the horror on your. no, no, that's a nice and it's a nice to have. yeah. it'sjust nice and it's a nice to have. yeah. it's just thought, nice and it's a nice to have. yeah. it'sjust thought, i mean yeah. it's just thought, i mean how much money do you need. yeah. know . i how much money do you need. yeah. know. i do how much money do you need. yeah. know . i do wonder yeah. yeah, i know. i do wonder that it it's a very, very strange story , a real big strange story, a real big headune strange story, a real big headline about that really a very few people this does. but i
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do think that there are still these weird inconsistencies , the these weird inconsistencies, the tax system and whatever. i certainly know we've face that i've got i've got five kids and that was a weird thing where it was like, by the way, not of my choice all your . of course not. choice all your. of course not. but and my wife says hello by the way but we were in a weird thing we're getting tax credits we get a certain amount and there's certainly this thing the you are an oversight and suddenly you're getting way less money. now we owe loads of money to paying back the last, you know. so it just is bit strange and certainly when you do factor in there is definitely a problem of childcare costs. and yes of course for people earning £100,000, it's, it's you know, ridiculous to talk like, oh my , ridiculous to talk like, oh my, poor them. but at the same time there of people who are there is a lot of people who are more class even more middle class or even working middle class and, this earning over a certain amount suddenly getting a lot less . you suddenly getting a lot less. you know, if you've got a household of 40, 50 , £60,000, you are not
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of 40, 50, £60,000, you are not rich . yeah, but there is an rich. yeah, but there is an extent to which the tax system you are. yeah. and certainly and this is also like self—employed people i hang out some friends today who's he's got a carpenter and if i'm not met cannon has carpentry and yeah carpentry business and yeah there's this weird thing and he was talking me about where, was talking to me about where, you to you know, it's great to get these then suddenly these jobs in but then suddenly you reach threshold you reach that threshold and then it. you're then you're just it. you're suddenly less for job, suddenly less for the job, carpentry, business with kelleher carpentry, yeah well, they on road traders i think they on road traders i think theyit they on road traders i think they it was that it was good by they it was that it was good by the way i mention because the way i mention that because they we've domino's pizza they we've got domino's pizza day and insist on they got they paid it so i like all right paid it so i was like all right mate i've mentioned other pizzas are available. yeah, but are available. exactly yeah, but knock on carpentry all day . it's knock on carpentry all day. it's always you've got you probably had . okay thank you for the had. okay thank you for the domino's pizza . it is very domino's pizza. it is very delicious. now leave me alone. stop texting me. i did have that other. oh yeah but headline is sponsored by confidence i look forward to very good
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professional for some free dining table i'm going to mention that other businesses later on in the i'll be honest with you we could do with a bit of fresh furniture here at gb news. oh sure. okay. but but you know, five kids, that's a that's a big domino's. bill, let me just by certainly just say that by now. certainly is i next and all our is now the i next and all our cars spied on. well cars being spied on. well whoever's listening mine will whoever's listening to mine will heahng whoever's listening to mine will hearing a lot of top the long elton john sing alongs so josh if you've got some yes tory mp leads warnings over uk security after chinese spyware found in government car. after chinese spyware found in government car . essentially they government car. essentially they found this little sim card and it was in a sealed component. scary. so it was there from before as it came and then the question is like how much are they tracking? it's not just like government ministers are in these it's visiting these cars, it's visiting diplomats, whoever. they could probably , probably can tell us probably, probably can tell us who exactly went to those number 10 parties for how long. this is this isn't good. it's a gridlock device. there was other stuff. remember was things about like
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the cameras that they were installed in that got put on hold because because the lords basically insisted the government do it . china basically insisted the government do it. china is not our mate . i know we had this our mate. i know we had this whole thing that they're, you know, we want to have the golden partnership and this stuff, they know, we want to have the golden par notship and this stuff, they know, we want to have the golden par notship friend. is stuff, they know, we want to have the golden par not ship friend. is stu�* are 1ey are not our friend. they are they steal , you know, any they will steal, you know, any ideas people this country ideas that people this country come with, they want control come up with, they want control of the world as the next superpower and they're not a democracy and not a democracy . democracy and not a democracy. so they say it's cool an evil regime. the chinese , they've got regime. the chinese, they've got the way they know everything about everything. i mean, if i lose now, i'm not calling lose my car now, i'm not calling a i'm going a locksmith. i'm just going to call embassy . that's call chinese embassy. that's exactly mean . and there's exactly what i mean. and there's an issue here. we've secure cameras that were chinese made hikvision, cctv cameras for the police forces installed . you police forces installed. you know, i'm it's very likely that those security cameras seem very up top security places also be looked at. yeah but i don't know it's deeply troubling we're in dark times are we not our last
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story in section we go to the daily mail and we've got too many overweight soldiers brings a new meaning to the term heavy artillery . thank you is very artillery. thank you is very good corporate britain so , which good corporate britain so, which is a class, is dangerously overweight. the past five years, more than five, not 5000, have been discharged . being been discharged. being overweight and obese, one was a staggering 30 stone big knife , staggering 30 stone big knife, big dave. i would use him as bomb, basically. i wouldn't object. i'll just drop him. it's a bomb. correct i mean, he'd be a bomb. correct i mean, he'd be a pretty decent human as well. i think it's just a ploy all behind him, the cut in numbers. so they're just making a bigger i think that's the thing. that's the ploy. yeah it's cool. i the ploy. but yeah it's cool. i mean, this is eddie this is actually a national security concern, isn't it? you know, not only is obesity wrecking the nhs and affecting public health but it's possibly making us less now it's possibly making us less now it could be but it's also one of
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the a here forever morgan what a name for morgan who's a long sergeant age in the coast guards said that as people always talk about body positivity being big being big is okay and it's almost obesity he sees a point of it and i think there's truth in that. yeah yeah, certainly the whole point of being in the army is that you you're meant to be fit. you're meant to be, you're meant to be fitter, stronger the other stronger than than the other side. surely it's like when you see coppers just feel like see fat coppers just feel like you never completed. was you never completed. there was a story last about cops story just last week about cops being x o uniforms and being given x x o uniforms and how are they going to catch burglars? the other issue is health care workers . so there health care workers. so there are huge levels of obesity among nurses, hospital and other medical professional . yeah, but medical professional. yeah, but i would . obesity is a problem i would. obesity is a problem across society and processed food and yeah but but certainly when you've got one in four of our services being obese that's
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an immediate problem for our defence is and whatever. but also there's a little interesting thing here. there's 60 people have had liposuction surgery and you're wondering who's paying for that. it means the nhs pay for is the ama paying the nhs pay for is the ama paying for that. so al—qaeda is doing think a doing that. you think that's a it's but the are it's a bit but the enemy are that it's you know just dropping mcdonald's has have a plug there so other burgers are available but but yeah it's not good and you're wondering how does it get to that point? you know, this is they can literally be ordered to eat less or to go on run. how are the people who are in charge? wait a minute. you charge? okay, wait a minute. you a go. 20 miles run a bit. off you go. 20 miles run around your point when go you 25 stone maybe you need to get in the gym. yeah. if a soldier. well yeah i mean that's it it's a simple question it when we wake up to this crisis we like it's business as usual and it's not and it's not good for people you it's the body you know it's okay the body positive , everything is okay. positive, everything is okay. but ultimately, it is not good
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for your health since it is that big it's just not. did you see a thing last was two years ago where the comic sophie hagan was basically complaining because they out these adverts about they put out these adverts about cancer out think cancer research, put out think saying obesity is the saying that obesity is the second cause of cancer . second biggest cause of cancer. and was like, this is body and she was like, this is body shaming. it's like, shaming. that's why it's like, that's going your life. that's going to save your life. yeah, like yeah, it was ridiculous. like this they were bigots this was like they were bigots for. well, yeah, that's like lung shaming smokers, it? lung shaming smokers, isn't it? that's what's that's ridiculous. that's what's next. well, that's the next. well, that's at the halfway point. join us in part three when got magic three when we've got magic mushrooms cigarettes plenty mushrooms cigarettes and plenty of goodies . get us mushrooms cigarettes and plenty of goodies. get us through mushrooms cigarettes and plenty of break oodies . get us through mushrooms cigarettes and plenty of break soiies . get us through mushrooms cigarettes and plenty of break so we . get us through mushrooms cigarettes and plenty of break so we canet us through mushrooms cigarettes and plenty of break so we can get; through mushrooms cigarettes and plenty of break so we can get bacngh mushrooms cigarettes and plenty of break so we can get back tor the break so we can get back to the break so we can get back to the papers. see, shortly .
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great to see you again i won't take it personally you didn't reply to any of my post. let's get straight to it with . the get straight to it with. the mirror and a story that could make harry cool again. mirror and a story that could make harry cool again . cocaine make harry cool again. cocaine and shrooms. yes prince harry could lose his us visa after admitting taking cocaine and magic mushrooms . so he's made on magic mushrooms. so he's made on a what's called an extraordinary ability visa is for sports people . and people who are people. and people who are princess. and i think that's ridiculous title is alien of extraordinary ability. yeah that's what that's not what he is. so now say because there is a thing where if you've done drugs in you , when you do the drugs in you, when you do the visa, you take stuff off. they they have a right to just go, well actually we don't want you in though it was in the car. even though it was odd ago. say that's odd years ago. but i say that's countered the fact these countered by the fact these killed 25 taliban members. so i'm they'll like , oh, we i'm they'll go like, oh, we don't like the way it and okay if it was 20 taliban who killed
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now then you know but i think if he if he did like 50 is allowed to heroin. yeah that's what i'm thinking yeah that's actually not a bad speaking of heroin by the way, the son and labour to ban cigarettes has their popular gone up in smoke eddie whoa it's an interesting one that because it's got this thing where it's in zealand where they're slowly, staggeringly staggering the ban for young i've said i've never smoked so i got with that one i'm very lucky in that mum and dad did that for quite a while . dad did that for quite a while. it's one of the few areas within the nhs that i just think, you know, did average smoke industry know. everybody knows the damage that smoking does and if you continue to do it. it's one of the few areas where i do honestly that if you're going to do that yourself, you need treatment based on each taking . treatment based on each taking. it's punishment. yeah, it's not a punishment. yeah, it's not show. mean, we it's not a show. i mean, we don't the nanny state, do don't want the nanny state, do we? don't well know, we? we don't want. well know, it's just, it's literal . i it's just, it's literal. i haven't smoked. i've never smoked . absolutely detest
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smoked either. absolutely detest it . there was a big hoo ha when it. there was a big hoo ha when remember they like oh remember when they were like oh wait, to pull out wait, they're going to pull out from i was from nightclubs and stuff. i was so happy like when you were stand got home and stand up and you got home and you had all your clothes staying and feel it inside, and you could feel it inside, you, like were you, it was just like they were like businesses in like all these businesses in closed. didn't close. closed. no, they didn't close. yeah. and so think you yeah. and so i just think you know like you say, know what like, like you say, either yourself, it's either pay for it yourself, it's costing billions. yes, costing the nhs billions. yes, it raises billions also in in tax revenue and whatnot. but people are literally dying, you know, that has this terrible thing on you . i personally think thing on you. i personally think that new zealand thing is a good idea. why why do it like we don't legalise ? other things don't legalise? other things that i'll have this poisonous impact . oh there that i'll have this poisonous impact. oh there are that i'll have this poisonous impact . oh there are there are impact. oh there are there are people are going to say obviously and the tory mp scott bennett and sit back saying what price and freedom what a future labour government also ban fatty foods not a bad idea alco and i will keep that gambling and anything that we do stays the mind boggles. anything that we do stays the mind boggles . now anything that we do stays the mind boggles. now i anything that we do stays the mind boggles . now i don't know mind boggles. now i don't know what the boggles are, but what the mind boggles are, but they painful . what
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they sound very painful. what exactly the boggles. that's. that's that we will reflect on in great detail. our next story in great detail. our next story in the guardian says we can't trust social media to diagnose ourselves. i agree . i did an ourselves. i agree. i did an onune ourselves. i agree. i did an online test and it i was a ross where clearly i'm more of a chandler . where clearly i'm more of a chandler. which friend of you johnston don't have any friends this is actually what i think you're like . jennifer i'm you're like. jennifer i'm actually monica . if i take this actually monica. if i take this is actually a really important story the major take is get kids off tiktok this the headline urgent need to understand between teens self diagnosing and social media use say there's and social media use say there's a report that's out in the comprehensive psychiatry that basically proves how all these kids mostly girls yeah teenage have started exhibit eating and have started exhibit eating and have self—diagnose as having tics i.e. like moving the hands are doing this stuff and it's come from an increase of these videos on tiktok they don't actually have the condition because it doesn't present the
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traditional way of it they're literally copying it and it's proof of that these this is social contagion of work that works through social media they talking about the impact of like as we in the past anorexia like there are spikes over time there's there was self—harming like 1015 years ago what this article doesn't about is the phenomenon of people coming out as non—binary and trans and how thatis as non—binary and trans and how that is part of this idea of people going online, finding these videos and essentially doing it because of underlying of anxiety, depression , low of anxiety, depression, low self—esteem. it's all tied in together. and when you're when you're young, you know, your body's up to all sorts of things. your mind's all over the place. terrible . the place. terrible, terrible. the quote here is the uptake has coincided with increase in numbers, uptake but chalk language that is it's a real a real problem with social media that kids see this stuff and all of a sudden they think they've got this they've got that
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they've got they have a self—diagnose i mean, it's not just mean people got on a net andifs just mean people got on a net and it's very dangerous business, dangerous place to be. and yeah, but it's mimicry and it's having an adverse impact on like i say, mostly most of these are young teenage girls. it's a very difficult time and there's a really good book called irreversible damage, which talks specifically about this phenomenon and really needs phenomenon. and it really needs to examined , looked into. to be examined, looked into. they're going lot of they're all going to be a lot of very kids in about 15, 20 years time. yeah, there's a lot of stuff going on at the moment where kids confused now, but they they're not alone. and the they they're not alone. and the they feel they've got something that they know necessarily have and think it's up a huge and i think it's up a huge amount of problems the future. well i do agree with you there i think a scandal awaits us at the daily mail now. and tell us about blurry photos , eddie. oh, about blurry photos, eddie. oh, it says unflattering photographs. gen z is a dump in smartphones in favour of digital cameras nearly 2000 because they love the blurry overlay snaps they produce . you know , really
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they produce. you know, really funny. it's a really trendy to sort of hooked is i say well sadie grace star user uploaded fun pic with her friends reading cards which received 184 million views. why did want to look in it someone else's hundred 84 million people look at your own friends. yeah. get your own friends. yeah. get your own friends . but it's just. it's friends. but it's just. it's just so easy for you to say. and it's so easy. i mean, it would die out. it's just a novel if people like. i've heard someone say that it them feel like taking photos on camera helps them feel like they're off grid. you still got cut of boots to get them developed. you you know, but that's the thing. these like the these are the these are like the these are the digital like those from the 2000. that's what's 2000. and that's what's interesting is that what we take as fact our lives sudden as like fact our lives sudden early that the writing also about it's come back round again you're like when did it go how am i old that stuff is coming back around. that's what's terrifying i love all these
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trends i used to live bright and then there was a little group there, a little group of people used to walk out dressed like i was from the fifties, and i used to typewriters was to carry typewriters and it was just like it's never going to catch on, no matter long. you do this, it's just you seven or eight people. and then they started over as started doing comb over as well. and like , you know what? and it's like, you know what? just it's not just just give up. it's not going happen. no, it ain't. going to happen. no, it ain't. and will out. it'sjust and this will die out. it's just it's just the i and this will die out. it's just it'sjust the i mean, it's just the i mean, a smartphone can put all these effects on any photo anyway true true. can we close out this true. josh can we close out this part on gender neutral oscars ? part on gender neutral oscars? oh, yeah. sam mendes , gender oh, yeah. sam mendes, gender neutral. because i've seen the oscars. there's no, really on there. well, i for me, it's comparatively comparatively sam mendes. so who is winning director himself, mendes. so who is winning director himself , the very director himself, the very overrated american rubbish. yes. not his bond film was good. there wasn't one of them was like some it says having gender neutral oscars is . i don't think
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neutral oscars is. i don't think that that's necessarily true i hope not he's talking in relation to the crown star, emma corrin , who identifies as corrin, who identifies as non—binary, uses the pronouns they them . that is essentially they them. that is essentially her. that's totally fine but she's not a they then that's maybe she identified she is a biologic woman now obviously there aren't going to be any mixed sex to what i don't like the term gender. let's talk about sex here. we talk about, you know, there's no mixed sex ward award for director best things like that question really becomes is there a difference between male actors and female ? between male actors and female? you're an actor. do what do you think? do you think that they should. no so do you think that they should be on the same criteria? so we shouldn't have? but i mean, really, it's an opportunity get more opportunity to get more awards because having because instead of having two awards, best supporting awards, correct, best supporting actor. actress, awards, correct, best supporting act�*were actress, awards, correct, best supporting act�*were at actress, awards, correct, best supporting act�*were at sky :tress, awards, correct, best supporting act�*were at sky movies we were we work at sky movies back day. it four back in the day. it you four awards more people are awards so more people are celebrated get to celebrated more people get to hear films so it's hear about these films so it's good for that sense you know you
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yeahi good for that sense you know you yeah ican good for that sense you know you yeah i can see where you coming from. they don't like the term actors the term actress. actors don't the term actress. any sexualised that's well but i think yeah if you've got a best female actor best male actor you know things about. so you don't think they should merge and i don't necessarily it's i don't think it's necessary. well it's fewer opportunities for women isn't it. you rid of the isn't it. if you get rid of the best award then another best award then that's another attack so attack. women. yeah. and so i would, i say the is equal would, i could say the is equal opportunities . yeah. but you see opportunities. yeah. but you see they did the same thing with i believe the, the, the british music awards which i can remember what they are remember often what they are because brits, that because i'm the brits, i'm that uncle, they brits. that's uncle, they are brits. that's how am anymore with. my how uncool i am anymore with. my little camera but little digital camera and but they were pointing out that when they were pointing out that when they did that most of awards they did that most of the awards went to men . so, it's less went to men. so, yes, it's less exposure, talent, indeed. exposure, full talent, indeed. so the world's gone mad and that is it for part three. but coming up, we naked old people, very cheap sex workers and also some news stories see shortly shortly .
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welcome back to headline as your first look at tomorrow's papers. with me, dolan and the top comedians , josh howie and eddie comedians, josh howie and eddie brim said let's get back into it. and we start with monday sun and a huge pile of junk will crash land to the judging from the views it's landed in the talk tv studio anymore bunny bhdges talk tv studio anymore bunny bridges mark and i not nasser warns that 2.5 space junk satellite is the question of the day and i don't know where it will land so hopefully the kremlin better luck but he says the friday radiation satellite is expected to plummet from sky on sunday night. gave or take 17 hours, give take 17 hours. and that sounds like a seven change announcement to me. yeah you got
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it. surely they've got an idea. this is when you want to be on board. yeah, they know where they put that. have a little sim card yeah know. they'll card it. yeah i know. they'll know i know exactly it's going but i also the earth budget also like the earth budget satellite , life and budget. satellite, life and budget. that's why it's falling down while you on the earth radiation really loads of money satellite the easyjet satellites josh staying on on low budget can we talk about sex workers please in the metro we can always talk about sex workers. although interestingly , as someone who's interestingly, as someone who's now up on my different feminist positions and wave, second wave and all of that sex work is a very controversial job description because some people get very upset and say that you shouldn't be calling it sex workers arguably is a choice for them. you know, it's a way of justifying people working in that industry when really they have no economic calling. get a job when they're a victim. yeah exactly. that's that's that's the idea . the headline is we the idea. the headline is we have to offer more , less because have to offer more, less because we don't have any other options.
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how the cost of living crisis is affecting workers the uk affecting sex workers in the uk why. yes it is interesting to hear sex workers. i believe in this article includes strippers . so the idea is obviously a closed because of covid or the strip clubs which would you know like probably thinking about it strip clubs and comedy clubs are the the first things to the sort the first things to close things reopen close the last things to reopen again difference is again although the difference is the living the now with cost of living crisis have come back but not to the level that they were before . this follows few people with . this follows a few people with someone working here in a charity and how she has to basically finish work and then go off and be a sex or be a prostitute. essentially to survive. now the question is . survive. now the question is. how much of it is for her survival and how much is it for her to maintain a lifestyle? this is where the argument would come in right? one person's survival is not the same if they literally they are talking literally but they are talking about here some sex workers people back intersex work people going back intersex work because literally are girls
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because they literally are girls working in like, you know strippers , dances, then having strippers, dances, then having to move a much darker area of that industry . it's a really that industry. it's a really desperately sad story that we're in a situation where people have to do this just to stay afloat. it is. it's a shocker. nick stop monday's guardian and it's time for. the naked truth about naturism . tell me about this, naturism. tell me about this, eddie . i love this, right? a new eddie. i love this, right? a new star. after 60, i became a naturist 75 and it felt like freedom. now as a manager. less than two years away from being 60. this absolutely i was i of male bull don't crack me don't cry but it's one of the gifts to getting old you don't care and this fella it turned he went to life drawing class so bloke sitting a and he was very impressive how his position didn't change he says now when you get to my age it doesn't move as quickly as it used to so that's probably why it's safe. and then he went round the woman who how with the classes house which is a bit dodgy he did it
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for the first time and he likes getting out and flushing it about he's mrs. 18, by the way. he's 80 he's 86 years old. he's basically captain tom of the of the night this whatever his name's stuart haywood . just like name's stuart haywood. just like say stuart, he's he's a naturist it if you if you love nature you want to out there may i recommend kick back camping vans. oh is that right. yeah but may but wear a towel under the upholstery please . another, upholstery please. another, another plug . let's head over to another plug. let's head over to the daily mail now, fully clothed. and there's another story on contentment are . you story on contentment are. you happy now, josh? am i know what? i am happy and the headline is happiness is making every minute count there's a simple science to contentment. it's reframing a time around life's little pleasures. this is basically an advertising for a book, but actually sounds like quite a good book called happier, happier hour. it's been a bit of a hit in america , but you know a hit in america, but you know what? there's stuff in here that fundamentally agree . even though
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fundamentally agree. even though this is essentially an advert. but one of the things you said the secret is have 2 to 4 hours or 2 to 5 hours of discretionary time a day. i to focus on the time a day. ito focus on the things that you enjoy hobbies and whatnot any less than that you feel stressed any more than that you're going to feel aimless. so that is one of the good other good good baseline. the other good bit say, is bond bit of advice is to say, is bond where do thing that you where you do the thing that you don't do, ironing or don't want to do, ironing or whatever with whatever and mix it with something that do want to something that you do want to do, like so if you're doing the school run, which i every day, it's i'll put it's like, oh, i'll put on a podcast. so you these things podcast. so you mix these things up it's becomes up and suddenly it's becomes less but yeah, less painful. yeah, but yeah, i get all that. she said, get all that. but she said, a woman, the woman who writes the book i've always book and, she says, i've always been happy. i that been happy. i trust that i don't. one's been don't. no one's always been happy. she says happy. then later on, she says that got ditched that she got ditched by a prospective husband two weeks before the wedding . and it was before the wedding. and it was the first time, and that's first bit of this that made me feel happy. bit of this that made me feel happy . and she said, when you happy. and she said, when you realise that time is precious, we're more likely to be happy by the simple , even boring things.
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the simple, even boring things. what if times precious? why would want to boring would you want to do boring things ? maybe it's not that you things? maybe it's not that you want to, but you want you want to, but you want to be, you know, that that know, having a choice that that was was really was i thought. that was a really good advice. she out she good advice. and so she out she has 65 more times walking her has 65 more times of walking her child anybody's child to school anybody's walk school and school is annoying and you stress the jacket and stress about the jacket and doing details have make doing details and have to make like conversations and like insane conversations and whatnot. you start whatnot. and when you start thinking this is thinking wait a minute this is i've thinking wait a minute this is pve got thinking wait a minute this is i've got few more these i've only got a few more these you start actually going, wait a minute, i'm actually to minute, i'm actually going to really rushing really rather than rushing along, you're actually i'll enjoy clearly never enjoy this. she clearly never watches watford fc because i've got that got another ten years that i really painful not really it's too painful to not not make them last year. there you go then that's your secret to happiness. stop it is despair. well look, i despair because we're on to our last. and this one is quite interesting and it's about how dates are getting cheaper. tell me more. well, it's easy. people are now doing their dates rather than having an expensive melodica coffee over which melodica coffee over woke which is which is kind of old school really . i mean i don't really really. i mean i don't really i've never to do the dating thing i've never done it. so
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just throw right now. it's not that i've met people old school. i've people bars . i've always met people in bars. my i've always met people in bars. my partner at the moment, my beautiful both work beautiful oasis. we both work the same industry. we got to know other that. know each other like that. so i'm a to face. i'm more of a face to face. always been a face to face person. assigned zoom person. but assigned to zoom dates zoom dates. i mean, what if you know , it's like roulette, if you know, it's like roulette, isn't it? if get the isn't it? what if you get the naturist pop up and i'm naturist fella pop up and i'm going to say pop up, pop up. that's that's a dangerous time. i think he's 86. i don't think it's though. i mean , it's a problem, though. i mean, it's a problem, though. i mean, it's been a since you it's been a while since you dated well. josh yeah. dated as well. josh yeah. i mean, it's strange this the whole like online dating totally like . i mean, i never like bypass. i mean, i never i've never done all that and i'm really interested to see how they friends, mine they do it. and friends, mine who still single. who are still single. i'm interested in the whole etiquette and etiquette and whatever. and a lot the going like one lot of them the going like one day or but and it doesn't day a day or but and it doesn't so idea that financially so the idea that financially you're out to a you're going to go out to a fancy but the thing fancy restaurant but the thing that not really talking about here don't want to go for here is you don't want to go for a with somebody on a first a meal with somebody on a first date probably date because you probably who knows to connection knows going to have a connection going for a coffee, going for a
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walk good stuff walk that's the good stuff because just you can be with because you just you can be with them for 1020 minutes or whatever and you get away whatever and then you get away you it is you don't like it. well it is usually the moment usually that the awkward moment and i would and then that first i would imagine first moment that and then that first i would imajust first moment that and then that first i would imajust say first moment that and then that first i would imajust say andt moment that and then that first i would imajust say and just ment that and then that first i would imajust say and just go, it that and then that first i would imajust say and just go, yeah, you just say and just go, yeah, that's it. i've also there's 14% of people said they found a love interest more attractive if they used a coupon to help settle the bill. well these might kind of yeah that's what i'm an alcohol missing this equation by the way. yeah but maybe a good thing maybe that means that they can actually have connection that actually have a connection that isn't coffees the opposite of beer goggles . it like when beer goggles. it it's like when you you've had it's you when you've had coffee it's so you're have so then you're going to have truth and. then you can build on that truth. maybe. i know that truth. maybe. i don't know if case. so happy if that was the case. so happy to marry would have to marry a guy who would have done runner okay . well, look done a runner okay. well, look thank you so much to my brilliant guests and headline is back tomorrow at 11 i'm back on friday .
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nine police. the uk spend nine police. the uk spen d £66,000 on police. the uk spend £66,000 on rainbow merchandise. the prime minister wants everyone to be a mathematician and activist it's claimed that the countryside is racist . but this is free speech racist. but this is free speech nafion racist. but this is free speech nation . welcome to free speech nation. welcome to free speech nation. welcome to free speech nation. with me, andrew doyle. so this is a show where we take a look at culture, current affairs and politics and of course, we'll have the latest from a and lovable social from a sweet and lovable social justice who justice activists who would happily stake for happily burned at the stake for your compassion. coming your lack of compassion. coming up on the show, we have author cara dance will join us from cara dance who will join us from america about the us america to talk about the us court of appeal ruling regarding single us single sex bathrooms in us schools david oldroyd schools. historian david oldroyd boldt will be to discuss boldt will be here to discuss the legacy of former pope benedict who away benedict xvi who passed away last on the last week. we reflect on the potential ramifications of a lawsuit the stars of lawsuit in which the stars of franco zeffirelli's, romeo and
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