tv Headliners Replay GB News January 15, 2023 5:00am-6:01am GMT
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next welcome back. you're watching news i'm bethany elsey with your top stories from the newsroom. a seven year old girl is in life threatening in hospital after. a suspected drive by shooting in north london. a total of people have been injured in the attack which happened outside a funeral in camden . which happened outside a funeral in camden. four which happened outside a funeral in camden . four women aged 21, in camden. four women aged 21, 41, 48 and 54 are being treated in hospital . the 48 year old has in hospital. the 48 year old has suffered potentially changing injuries . a second child, aged injuries. a second child, aged 12, was taken to hospital but has since been . police are has since been. police are appealing any witnesses and say no arrests have yet been made . no arrests have yet been made. the royal college of nursing says it will a new round of strikes in february if negotiation don't progress by the end of this month. nurses for more than 70 nhs trusts england are already planning to out on the 18th and 19th of january in a dispute over pay
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and patient safety . the union and patient safety. the union says double the number of nurses will be asked to take part in the action next month if it goes. this comes as the government are trying to pass new legislation requiring minimum service levels on strike days. minimum service levels on strike days . the uk has sanctioned days. the uk has sanctioned iran's prosecutor general following the execution of a british iranian national accused of spying. prime minister described the killing of ali riza akbari as callous and cowardly. iran's media is reporting the british has been summoned to . iran's foreign summoned to. iran's foreign ministry, which accusing britain of meddling their national security. but foreign secretary james cleverly , the government james cleverly, the government will temporarily withdraw its ambassador from iran , and ambassador from iran, and they're considering further action . what i found out earlier action. what i found out earlier this morning from the officials in tehran that this had taken place , of course, i was filled place, of course, i was filled with a with a revulsion that i
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think any reasonable person have thatis think any reasonable person have that is why we have taken this decisive action , is why we've decisive action, is why we've made it clear that our response not necessarily be limited to the measures that we have announced today. we take this incredibly seriously . russia has incredibly seriously. russia has launched a major attack on ukraine today. launched a major attack on ukraine today . vital energy ukraine today. vital energy facilities the country and destroy an apartment building to meet probes. regional governor says at least five people have been killed and 27 people, including six children were injured when the missiles hit the flats . moldova says missile the flats. moldova says missile debns the flats. moldova says missile debris found in the north of their country . well, rishi sunak their country. well, rishi sunak has pledged to british battle tanks to ukraine to help the country retake lost to russia . country retake lost to russia. and five more pages of classified have been found in us president joe biden's family home in the state of delaware . home in the state of delaware. earlier this week. his legal
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team documents relating to his time as vice president during the obama administration had been found . his house and been found. his house and private in washington. the attorney general has appointed a special counsel to investigate the matter. you're up to date on tv, online dab+ radio. this is gb news. now it's time for headliners . headliners. hello and welcome to headuner. headliners. hello and welcome to headliner . as your first look at headliner. as your first look at sunday's newspapers . i'm andrew sunday's newspapers. i'm andrew doyle and joining me tonight are the comedians aidan o'reilly a.k.a dapper laughs and diane spencer , a.k.a. angela rayner. spencer, a.k.a. angela rayner. stunt double. let's have a look at tomorrow's front pages. first, we're going to start with the sunday telegraph, which leads with starmer. i will slash nonsense bureaucracy the nhs. i go labour look nhs okay. the observer cabinet split over nhs
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pay observer cabinet split over nhs pay piles pressure on sunday mirror goes tory donor tycoons £4.5 million to destroy people p e and the front cover the sunday times. now they lead with winds peace talk plan ahead of coronation. they're trying to reconcile those issues between william harry. sunday express now sex assault during riot at migrant centre and the sun has an absolutely story go seven shot in drive by funeral and the daily now has dancing on ice star is mates with an annoying and they've run with the only race is essex oh my goodness and those where front pages . i'm those where front pages. i'm going to kick off looking at sunday's papers with the front page of the telegraph dan what have they got . so they're have they got. so they're they're talking about keir starmer here. he's he will slash
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the nonsense so bureaucracy within nhs reform will die . within nhs reform will die. warning as labour leader chris rise in the mind boggling waste of time and energy and money he he wants to slash all useless jobs, all the money that's being thrown around. i like this personally myself. looking at this is a new it's a new look for labour on this and i think it's reform session to finally see someone talking about what's going on coming up with some going on and coming up with some form solution. well yeah. form of solution. well yeah. although very although it doesn't sound very laboun although it doesn't sound very labour. he said he had labour. i mean he said he had the that services of the idea that the services of the idea that the services of the envy of the world is plainly wrong that like something wrong that sounds like something a say. well, i think a tory would say. well, i think all diversity when you look all the diversity when you look at that they spend at all money that they spend in on those diversity when on those diversity people, when the managers , all of that, the managers, all of that, there's surely to be saved there's surely money to be saved not. but not. oh, definitely. but i question reform or di that to the patients. it's sounds like a it really does. i mean they're the ones with the drugs. they are. well know those are the pharmacists now. oh yes. yes. and a bloke i know whose number
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i give you so , what i like i can give you so, what i like about this is that he's saying actually coming up with ideas which dan just said, it's a great new look . until now, he's great new look. until now, he's previously just gone. that's wrong. that's wrong . that's wrong. that's wrong. that's wrong. that's wrong. that's wrong. we do it different, but not said how. yeah. well is the point is i mean, dan, i think you're right. you know, we all love the nhs insofar as it's know free at the point of contact. you go in there. if you're ill you get healed and like where if you're. yeah. or and die. but it's like and you you die. but it's like a bit it's a business isn't it. and that's the first thing you do. and you look at a business, if money, you get if it's losing money, you get rid the people need rid of the people really need it. think makes the yes it. so you think makes the yes admin issues probably. i like what he's doing here because he's talking about he's actually talking about reducing makes he's actually talking about revery1g makes he's actually talking about revery good makes he's actually talking about revery good point makes he's actually talking about revery good point that makes he's actually talking about revery good point that you'veakes a very good point that you've already wrong already got something wrong with. you self—refer with. why can't you self—refer to part of your body that to that part of your body that relates like my gp is relates to it like my gp is actually i ran up actually already that i ran up to go see the gp and they said wait a minute, you've got problem in your knee your problem in your knee and your hip. they sent me straight
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hip. and they sent me straight to if can, an to the physio if you can, an appointment the gp. i mean appointment with the gp. i mean this is the, it's, it's really, really hard in england at the moment appointments. moment to get appointments. you're the phone, perhaps the you're on the phone, perhaps the agent you phone at agent unless you phone at like 8 am. on the adult and am. on the adult mental and you phone you join phone and you join you join queue. that's right. he's been telling everyone who at telling everyone who to call at the time on a monday the same time on a monday morning trying morning when you're trying to get to school love get your kids to school love that excellently. so those are the sort of things that we could do about. couldn't do something about. couldn't be. yeah got some yeah and he's got some suggestions i think is interesting. interesting. okay well, going to move on now well, we're going to move on now to page of times, to the front page of the times, the times, diane, what the sunday times, diane, what they. i first that they. well i first read that there peace talk plan there was a peace talk plan instantly of russia and instantly thought of russia and ukraine would. ukraine when you would. yes, i mean, peace talks. it sounds like very serious like something very serious has happened. don't happened. like, i don't know, a war. but now we're talking about prince know we're prince harry know we're not talking harry. talking about prince harry. i mean, this to be the mean, this seems to be the issue. you find them? well, i think it's great. i think it's quite fun. when i look at this, i just imagine prince harry i can just imagine prince harry opting with king and opting to sit down with king and explain how. his explain how. he lost his virginity beyond the pub, got spanked woman. love
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spanked by an old woman. i love that he doesn't have to tell him because it's in the book. yeah i know going have to know he's going to have to explain himself the drugs explain himself and the drugs and laughing they and everything laughing i they should and let should film it live and let watch you think that watch it. well you think that charles going there charles is going to sit there a copy of harry's some somebody is going through like going through it like highlighted bits they've put tabs course so harry that tabs and of course so harry that start page one i mean i hope he hasn't read it but the thing is it is about the coronation. it's like trying to get this resolved ultimately between two. ultimately between these two. but difficult to come but it's very difficult to come to resolution again when the to a resolution again when the person resolve person you're trying to resolve things still stopping things with is still stopping you. you so much okay, so you. thank you so much okay, so this is my real issue with like so is constantly going so harry is constantly going about how, you know, he's really at the tabloids and he really annoyed because annoyed at the media because they things they constantly quote things that personal. that are private and personal. and his book, quotes and then in his book, he quotes text messages from his family. right? so is there not some kind of hypocrisy here? i thought i mean, that's his terms, isn't mean, that's on his terms, isn't it his private information it is his private information he's terms. he's given out on his terms. it's different if the journalists talking about journalists just talking about your if want your private stuff, if you want to it, can give it out.
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to give it, you can give it out. do you think william and kate feel that way about that? that's creative it's text creative because it's a text message from you can't message from saying you can't unless sending to unless you're sending a text to yourself, which think harry is possibly inclined to do because he seems to enjoy hugging himself and talking to himself does a bit. what do you make of his revelation of the 25 confirmed kills? it sound confirmed kills? it does sound someone at the pub someone boasting down at the pub . yeah. whole except. no, no . yeah. the whole except. no, no i'm not going to spend my time reading. i'm going to read the gob that appear in the media and that's all only time i'm giving this man if you read the whole because put up like the because somebody put up like the full so that you could full two pages so that you could read within. context. yes. read it within. context. yes. and even cont text and even within cont text i found crass of course. yes, found it crass of course. yes, but mean military but this is i mean military loads of military people have. we don't we just we just don't do that. we just don't numbers to talk don't about numbers to talk about know that kind of about you know that kind of thing and of course it's created a security nightmare the a security nightmare in the family. weird. it is family. but it's weird. it is still the victim much still playing the victim much constantly. what's constantly. yeah. and what's amazing he already the amazing is he already plays the victim, he's got this mass victim, but he's got this mass messiah one of the messiah complex. one of the things i'm to things he says is, i'm to forgive forever thing you've
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forgive you forever thing you've done. wow thanks. how are you? what's so great with me? okay, well, we're going to be hopefully we won't have to talk about him ever again. we're going move through now to the sunday express. what they sunday express. dan what if they gone with. yes not a very nice story all assault during story at all sex assault during a a migrant centre. a riot at a migrant centre. i mean is more horrible news and everything about the migrants threats of kidnap among in terrify riot at migrant centre migrant workers worker claimed to be the victim of a sexual assault during a riot and someone else had their finger broken and it's just bad bad press and just makes you angry, doesn't it? well, of course it does. you know, i mean, what can you say about this, diane? well i mean, what is interesting is because of the different groups, people that are in these centres that developing gangs, that actually developing gangs, it's prison it's very much like a prison system. obviously system. so obviously you're going prison mentality going to have a prison mentality and different gangs who and you have different gangs who are all claiming turf, the different areas of the asylum centre. interesting centre. and what's interesting is documents of reveal
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is, the documents kind of reveal what happens yes, in what happens by step. yes, in terms that there was a power cut and then it about an hour and 40 minutes after the power cut that the fire started. and then they set the centre. and then set fire to the centre. and then sometime after that, the violent start. course, you're start. and of course, you're deaung start. and of course, you're dealing huge numbers at the dealing with huge numbers at the moment to moment for everyone, everyone to sort irrespective of sort of agreed irrespective of where on the political where you stand on the political spectrum are spectrum that the numbers are just escalating through the just escalating that through the roof. and this is really good news people traffic news for people traffic traffickers and criminals. someone handle on someone has to get a handle on it. if tories can't, is it. and if tories can't, is labour to? i dunno. all labour going to? i dunno. all i know is that all calls like this come out and then that the proposing to put these big take, these buildings in these big buildings in your local after you read local towns. after you read this, be like this, you're going to be like you want it. that's you don't want it. but that's the thing is. it does kind the other thing is. it does kind of as a of a gift to the of act as a bit of a gift to the reactionary right as well, doesn't it, when you see criminal behaviour among which isn't migrants isn't reflective of all migrants , front page and , but it's front page news and all sudden, you know, it all of a sudden, you know, it makes harder to handle makes it harder to handle doesn't and were doesn't it. and there were also and made effort to and they made the effort to state there were people who state that there were people who are migrants centre are also migrants the centre appealing calm trying to get
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appealing for calm trying to get people to calm down. yeah but unfortunately have unfortunately when you have a situation the person who situation like is the person who decides things which decides to set fire things which is end up of is going to end up of overwhelming else. overwhelming everybody else. right okay. well, we're right exactly. okay. well, we're going to move on to . the sun going to move on now to. the sun on sunday. diane, this is very sad isn't it's deeply sad news, isn't it? it's deeply sad. deeply worrying. sad. and it's deeply worrying. so a girl of seven is fighting for her life because . she was for her life because. she was shot in a drive , shooting at a shot in a drive, shooting at a church funeral . now, this is church funeral. now, this is deeply concerning for so many reasons because obviously we very tight gun laws. so obviously whoever has these guns, you have to suggest that they are unlicensed and the funeral, there are about 200 sorry, 300 or 50 mourners. yeah. and as they leaving the funeral, a car by and there's this loud banging sound and of course in the uk we're not used gunfire we don't know what that and this was in houston so this was in the middle of central broad daylight. yes this is this is just unfathomable. it's the sort of thing that we just don't
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experience you know, on the whole, don't know anything whole, we don't know anything about know who it about it. we don't know who it is. know why they did is. we don't know why they did it. been it. they haven't been apprehended. only know apprehended. no, we only know who was for. but who the funeral was for. but that seems to be for a woman and her daughter. and the woman suffered, was a heart suffered, i think, was a heart attack her daughter attack. her daughter had leukaemia, so you think, well, where on is this all where on earth is this all coming from? so i really hope that we have enough. i this is the one time when cctv seems to work. we that they can find work. yeah we that they can find that car as quickly as possible and find people . i mean and find those people. i mean anything to write down, there's not to say. really. now not much to say. not really. now i've a daughter, a bit i've got a daughter, a bit younger it just younger than that, so it just breaks heart. just. yeah. breaks my heart. just. yeah. horrible my. go horrible to read my. thoughts go out to the family. yeah okay, well, that's the end of part one, but do join us after the break. be talking break. we're going to be talking about sunak threatening about rishi sunak threatening sturgeon teachers, threatening strikes and stonewall threatening gender pay gap . threatening the gender pay gap. in minutes .
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welcome back to headliners first look at sunday's newspapers with me, andrew doyle am i fantastic comedy panel of dapper laughs. dan o'reilly and diane spence thank you both for looking so glam tonight diane when you do you know you always do and then you've always you've come for the turtleneck i like that you do it. i'm bringing its do bring it. i'm bringing its own back because you just know when going need to when you're going to need to apologise, dear. it's like apologise, dear. so it's like the repent is just the symbol of repent is just thinking or holmes, thinking steve jobs or holmes, you know, from the sarah scandal. but let's face it, it's chic whichever way you cut it. this is a special one. because if i'm feeling a bit of a rascal, i can undo it. so but, you know, that's saved up for the end of the day. all right. we're going begin this we're going to begin this section with the sunday telegraph and uk, its telegraph and the uk, its support the iran nuclear support for the iran nuclear deal support for the iran nuclear deal. this is not good. deal. diane, this is not good. no no, at all. so due to no no, not at all. so due to execution of british iranian citizen ali reza akbari, who was
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accused of spying and he denied it right up until the very end obviously, there's been an international outcry. yes. yes obviously. yes. and britain has been a key player . the talks in been a key player. the talks in restoring the obama era nuclear deal restoring the obama era nuclear deal, the one that trump scuppered. yeah trump scuppered it. so essentially the is that we try to encourage iran not to develop nuclear . yes and we lift develop nuclear. yes and we lift the sanctions . and you might the sanctions. and you might think , doesn't that sound a bit think, doesn't that sound a bit unfair because the uk has nuclear weapons the us has a nuclear weapons the us has a nuclear weapons. yes, true. but we're also not arming russia with drones. yeah and we're also not executing citizens. yeah know, this a corrupt know, this is a corrupt authoritarian regime. there authoritarian regime. yes, there is . aren't rioting authoritarian regime. yes, there is .aren't rioting in is citizens. aren't rioting in the streets, cutting hair. exactly. exactly you know those , right. not right. as protesters have our support, to be honest, because that regime has got to come to an end anyway. we're going to move on to this one. this is the
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classroom agenda. what's this done? okay the times and done? okay this is the times and the headline is teachers vote to strike. in february after talks stall . so i guess we've got oh, stall. so i guess we've got oh, my god, narrow it down. we've got the train striking the big men, the nurses, the doctors. it's almost like after 12 years of a tory government, everything's falling apart. that's done. the thing is right, these kids what about the kids i all they're this right because they've had two years of disruption they've been stuck at home, had proper lessons or any. yeah. it's not really fair on them is it. isn't it's not fair on them. it's out of order on them. no it's out of order when, when these are when, when these talks are happening. main thing happening. i mean the main thing people are saying look, teachers care a lot more about the and the and the welfare. the education and the welfare. the know the politicians do. so i know them because know them know them because i know them so know i'm what asking for i'm sure what they're asking for is an unreasonable one. the politician. to politician. and they need to make effort to try make more of an effort to try and work out. and i'm just getting frustrated that all of these people are striking these great people are striking when wish like you when i wish it was like you parking and parking wardens or exactly don't surgeon
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exactly i don't like surgeon strike someone them. strike yeah someone needs them. oh a tree doesn't oh my friends a tree doesn't actually. yeah actually. right. sorry. yeah well, else well, you know something else and when the people and i loved it when the people who do all the work on the motorways was striking i was like, yeah, driving no like, yeah, driving home, no detour. and detour. right, the thing and right the is said the teaching union by the is saying that union by the way is saying that part the teaching you want part of the teaching you want it's union it's national education union which to say is kind which i do have to say is kind an activist this point an activist body at this point anyway but let's leave aside they're saying that the pay has fallen about relative to fallen about 23% relative to inflation that inflation since 2010. that a lot. and as cost of lot. yeah. and as a cost of living crisis, i was a teacher and i know hard it is and and i know how hard it is and i would say that if we were paying them properly, we wouldn't have this maybe. yes. this problem. yeah, maybe. yes. and sorry to interrupt and i'm sorry to interrupt you, but the main thing is but i mean, the main thing is the with the nurses. the same with the nurses. they're they're not they're worried that they're not going get more teachers, come going to get more teachers, come in so, in and join in, obviously. so, yeah, is it. and what yeah, well, this is it. and what do you think, diane, about you know, as dan said, this an know, as dan said, this is an essential with essential worker. same with nurses and with doctor. do you not know the not think that you know the government do this government wanted to do this minimal service requirement? yes, think that had yes, i don't think that had some merit i really don't merit to that. no i really don't because unfortunately what's
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going with minimal going to happen with a minimal service school, service requirement in a school, that you're that basically means you're going videos of the going be shown videos of the lion king and my lady on lion king and my fair lady on repeat. do that. but, you repeat. don't do that. but, you know, that's a valid education. you terrible. sometimes you are terrible. sometimes you get excuse for showing get there's excuse for showing the lion king over. a get there's excuse for showing the lion king over . a friend of the lion king over. a friend of mine used to show shrek or shrek team. know they some team. you know they some educational value to that and you know as a kid that's the best the lesson that we best part of the lesson that we have well, what's is have in that tv. well, what's is that the national association of , the one that has the union of women teachers. yes. decided not to strike. and i wonder whether that's to do with basic, because the union of women teachers just went , i the union of women teachers just went, i need to have my child in school even though i've got my pay- school even though i've got my pay. there's that issue. yeah and you know parents a parents really do rely on that. yeah they do. i mean they learn in they do. i mean they learn in the pandemic is horror awful but also people forget when a kid misses even a week. yeah they over are massively behind and there's a teacher it's quite frustrating trying to get them back. don't think
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back. yeah. and i don't think that union is with all that the, the union is with all these strikes, mean they don't these strikes, i mean they don't sort of india themselves, the pubuc sort of india themselves, the public people getting sick public people are getting sick of know but they do of it only they know but they do need teachers for they're need to pay teachers for they're doing. find doing. and what i find interesting is rishi sunak wants kids maths till they're kids to learn maths till they're 18. things that 18. but one of the things that this union wants is to have more money for maths teachers, because we have a shortage of maths well maths teachers. okay, well i'm going move to the sun now. going to move on to the sun now. china admits it finally china admits it is finally admitting covid strategy admitting their covid strategy is disturbing is failing. these are disturbing figures. admits figures. yeah, china admits 60,000 people have died from covid in just one month in horror , 1,000% increase as the horror, 1,000% increase as the goes mental there's queues outside funeral homes you know it's it sounds dreadful and we're still letting them in until so is that happening because i thought the idea was that we would there would be checks at the airport but that's not happening i thought there were well might be were checks that. well might be misinformation. don't quote me on that's good for on that. but that's good for border town. that guy thing he's done. you know china had this
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zero policy. yeah and everyone locked down to authoritarian degrees and then of course and inevitably when they do yeah you know let people go there is going to this is going to happen it's going to happen we should mention kind of mention by the way it kind of important average age important the average age of death yeah that it's death 80.3. yeah and that it's cold really close . china cold it's really close. china already has the world's largest oldest population mean maybe with these figures they don't . with these figures they don't. but is, is they but the point is, is they they're rapidly their top spot on the most old people also what's worth noting is that no they live in very like the chinese new year. yes. it's 22nd of january. they're going to do a lot moving about before then. and whoever's got it. yeah it's we're going to have an increase . chinese new year 22nd of january. everybody's going to move. but look, the point is, i mean surely the lockdown idea here just hasn't worked. i it's just postponed the inevitable . just postponed the inevitable. and as we say, the people who are being affected are the older
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generation. it's not younger people at risk. right? so surely learnt now that these learnt by now that these lockdowns effective lockdowns aren't effective surely they're definitely surely i mean they're definitely not should not have any not and we should not have any more of them. i like my job. don't industry don't shut my industry again. okay it's going to be one after this next story, this is sunday's mail single use plastics thing of the past right ? yeah. no no, because they're going to take more of your away. so the daily mail single use plastic plates, trays and cutlery will be banned from october and wet wipes could be next wait wet wipes as in every mother who is changing their baby forget it. you're going to have to wash that tea towel . so have to wash that tea towel. so essentially they're going through all the plastic stuff and they're trying to stop all the plastic things and. now they're choosing more things they're choosing more things they're going to take from they're going to take away from us. you'll have to leave us. so now you'll have to leave your house not only with a reusable coffee cup. you'll to take your own cutlery. might take your own cutlery. you might as take your own plate, as well take your own plate, but. but what about the environment, what the environment, diane? what all the plastics in the ocean. what about? all those dolphins that
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are choking are getting choked, choking on straws? you what. you straws? oh, i tell you what. you want take plastics. want to. take away plastics. let's children's toys . let's look at children's toys. okay. think how many okay. you think how many toys are of plastic ? but you are made of plastic? but you know what? they're not going to they're going take the they're not going to take the toys. going attack toys. they're going to attack that by adults, because that are used by adults, because everybody on the knows , everybody on the planet knows, you all the toys . you take away all the toys. every single parent is going to have a right on that. i have to sit do get annoyed by sit down. i do get annoyed by the straws. because the paper straws. yeah. because they apart and they get they fall apart and they get stuck in your teeth. i think you know, much into , you know, i'm very much into, you know, i'm very much into, you know, of this stuff and know, all of this stuff and every a turtle or every i see like a turtle or something with one of the big, you know, the big holders, is that going to straw up his nose? i think he's had a good night. no, i mean, i've i think i think it's terrible the scenes. i mean, when you have a look when have a look, we never look at have a look, we never look at have stuff plastic bottles they're they're don't get of they're they're don't get rid of plastic shopping plastic bottles shopping i mean shopping she's got shopping bags. mummy, she's got about shop in plastic about a thousand shop in plastic shopping they shopping bags. yeah. but they stop start charging in stop when they start charging in the plastic shopping bags they did you just, did reduce them. so you just, you for, for ruining the
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you just for, for ruining the environment. that. environment. i love that. but the but about all the the but what about all the plastic test strips and the masks that we had. yes, that's true you know, maybe true as well. you know, maybe into ocean well. also, into the ocean as well. also, it's so much the uk and the it's not so much the uk and the eu most of the pollution, the plastic ocean plastic pollution in the ocean from asian systems. it's from asian river systems. it's not it's economic not it's about economic underdevelopment over there. it's problem. are it's not about our problem. are we really making that much of a difference? i don't know. well, according to greenpeace, not according to greenpeace. this will of make will not even sort of make a dent what's going on. so dent in what's going on. so that's fun. well, that way they just also, know, just specify also, you know, they're specifying on those they're just specifying on those items. why don't get rid of all like one use items. yeah. anyway okay. well, we're going to move on now to the metro and. rishi sunakis on now to the metro and. rishi sunak is willing to pay his trump card to stop nicholas sturgeon and gender reforms. this very interesting story says that, yes . so this very interesting story says that, yes. so rishi sunak could unleash a constitutional crisis if he blocks the scottish gender reforms he's been warned all hell is going to break loose. 25 years of devolution industry. i
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mean yeah i don't really understand too of what's going on here. i haven't looked into what the gender reforms are and stuff like that, but it does seem a bit crazy that he's going to get involved and stir it all up. can tell you can help up. i can tell you i can help you there because what the snp in the scottish government have done effectively said done is they've effectively said you longer need a medical you no longer need a medical diagnosis yourself diagnosis is to declare yourself the opposite legally, which the opposite sex legally, which means don't just means that you don't can just live for three live as the opposite for three months, that means. and months, whatever that means. and then yourself to then you can declare yourself to be sex. and this has be the other sex. and this has ramifications for women's rights because it can anyone ramifications for women's rights becau identify can anyone ramifications for women's rights becau identify (the anyone ramifications for women's rights becau identify (the female could identify into the female category women's category and into women's spaces. oh, okay. so it's not a good thing, i would argue. diane, do you think? well diane, what do you think? well it also lowers the age. so originally you would be 18 and then it lowers it 60. yeah. and also it changes like you said from the two years you have to live as, as the that you believe you are into three months now . you are into three months now. obviously that is a bit of an issue because remember as a teenageri issue because remember as a teenager i went through a of different phases and you are still and do know what i, i
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still and do you know what i, i just care about person who is already living in and they feel to be the wrong body. but if they only spend three months and then after three months they go, yeah, going to yeah, yeah, yeah, i'm going to have surgery , i'm going take have surgery, i'm going to take pills things. yeah whereas pills and things. yeah whereas if they had like a, like a bit more of a buffer period, like two buffer with two year buffer period with a medical maybe , some of them medical maybe, some of them wouldn't go all the way. maybe someone would. oh no, i just someone would. oh no, i was just having bad tony. this is having a very bad tony. this is one of those topics. yeah i'm very of a minefield. i'm a very bit of a minefield. i'm a little scared, but i'm a bit little bit scared, but i'm a bit scared . i think, you know, that scared. i think, you know, that whole it feels to me whole aside, it feels to me like, you know, if they've made that decision, done that decision, they've done that. issue here is that. the bigger issue here is him involved taking him getting involved and taking away that. right. okay. but he kind has to right because kind of has to right because this is my on this and you can tell i'm wrong. yeah but tell me if i'm wrong. yeah but the scotland is the view it's scotland is interpreting the equality act differently and saying sex doesn't mean sex it means gender identity is effectively identity, which is effectively what if they what they're doing. and if they implementing, it means that people say england could people say in england could go to gender
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to scotland, get a gender recognise then recognise certificate and then go that would apply go to england. that would apply to has to kind of step in. to me. has to kind of step in. yeah unless changes english yeah unless he changes english law get it over law. say if you get it over there it doesn't count over it which is something that has been mooted and not down mooted and has not down particularly is particularly well. but that is something least he something that at least he wouldn't then to ride wouldn't be then trying to ride roughshod scottish roughshod over scottish decisions . roughshod over scottish decisions. but roughshod over scottish decisions . but the equality act decisions. but the equality act covers all of the uk and that's the here really. if there is a constitutional crisis blooming, probably the snp fault if they could know because to be honest, haven't had a rigorous checks. i haven't had a rigorous checks. i haven't had a debate about this. you know, nicholas sturgeon has basically any basically been saying any feminist says concerned feminist who says i'm concerned about there's no to about this has no there's no to that what she that argument. that's what she said, very high said, because she's very high handed anyway. me on handed anyway. that's me on my high that we're going to high horse that we're going to be on the sunday telegraph. now, stonewall back in the news again. diane ? the again. what for, diane? the gender pay gap . so this with gender pay gap. so this with it's a good thing, isn't it? we don't like the gender pay gap, right? well, technically don't. but they're eroding the numbers that report on it. so what stonewall have done is they've said, well, okay , when you ask
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said, well, okay, when you ask people when you do your census. yeah. you don't just do your sex, you do it gender based questions. you say, do you identify a man, woman, non—binary other prefer not to say so because of that it means that people aren't going on their sex, which means that suddenly the women, the on what actually is a woman because there's no such thing as a woman now. so in other words a lot of men who've earned a lot more money traditionally now identifying as women, that changes the stats. is that what you're stats. i mean i don't you're the stats. i mean i don't know many i know know how many people i know you're to talk about this. you're eager to talk about this. do i feel about my do you know what i feel about my own gender after these to. i don't know. i'll go to scott on this matter in. fact someone tweeted last week after the show my tweeted last week after the show my lack of a proper education is showing show. and i've showing on this show. and i've written . oh, yeah, it was. written tosh. oh, yeah, it was. and it right now. so i and i feel it right now. so i think in simple to me how you meant to see there's a gender meant to see if there's a gender pay gap if meant to see if there's a gender pay gap if you can't work out
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what gender is. well that's it that's that's the issue. so there are there you go. you nailed it. i mean, the thing is, diane, right? so with the gender pay gap, diane, right? so with the gender pay gap, though, however, you know, you you know, in this country, it is illegal to pay women less for work as women less for the same work as men already illegal for men that's already illegal for 50 yes. so you know, a 50 years. yes. so you know, a lot of the debates around the gender pay gap, i find a bit confusing anyway. and then when you add in to that you you add in to that that you don't the stats are actually don't if the stats are actually talking women or talking about men or women or non—binary, this whole talking about men or women or non—bi a|ry, this whole talking about men or women or non—bi a big this whole talking about men or women or non—bi a big mess.iis whole talking about men or women or non—bi a big mess. if whole talking about men or women or non—bi a big mess. if you le talking about men or women or non—bi a big mess. if you could thing's a big mess. if you could say it's a big mess, but i the gender pay gap in the uk almost 15% according the office of 15% according to the office of national okay, so national statistics. okay, so that's 50, mainly. but you that's still 50, mainly. but you know, thing you have to look know, the thing you have to look at is, well, does that mean that women lower paid jobs. women are doing lower paid jobs. is a lot of them are is it because a lot of them are in childcare there's a lot of different things happening there. to take there. but women tend to take part jobs more than as part time jobs more than men as well. which factored well. yeah. which is factored in. but something to do in. yeah so but something to do with the stonewall thing is that actually people like tick actually give people like tick to we're one the top
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to say we're one of the top employers stonewall and employers of stonewall and that's what people are trying to achieve filling oh my achieve by filling in, oh my question is how valuable is a stonewall tick at the moment? because they've lost ofsted, they've lost the bbc , they've they've lost the bbc, they've lost quite a few things because of behaviour in stonewall. basically say us lots of basically say give us lots of money if you give money money and if you give us money and our rules, we'll put and follow our rules, we'll put you high up our rankings. you up high up on our rankings. but you want to follow that but do you want to follow that rule? no it's a racket. so rule? no yeah, it's a racket. so anyway, for part anyway, so that's all for part to us after the break. but to join us after the break. but misogynistic influences are taking social media. why people are celibate and are choosing to be celibate and why people are turning to why young people are turning to satanism . so you can imagine .
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biden's home. that's a bit embarrassing i love joe biden is the gift keeps on giving not that you wouldn't let him drive a car . i don't that you wouldn't let him drive a car. i don't even know if he does and he's running the country. love this. so the first batch of classified documents found biden's delaware home a third batch were found in his garage. i think it brings total to six documents. yeah and i mean , it's all decent because of mean, it's all decent because of course, everyone all eyes were on trump because trump had those classified documents in mar a lago. i think think the thing with that was, was that he said the president can declassify them. so technically weren't and he's like a wizard just massive he's like a wizard just massive he because he's a he can them because he's a geezer the vice president as geezer but the vice president as biden was when this happened he can't because he's vice i don't understand this guy was looking into this and i was reading an article about it by an expert in there and said this guy said that this actually common but actually it's quite easy just actually it's quite easy to just to you with you and to take you home with you and not got this surely not realise got this surely his house is a safe place isn't it.
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well not i don't know. well people go follow him around seeing leaving seeing what he's leaving in coffee stuff. that's coffee and stuff. that's my point because he was point because biden when he was asked said he didn't know asked he said he didn't know what contained. what these documents contained. not surprised if not so well. i'd be surprised if he doesn't he is. he did. he doesn't know he is. to fair, like you have to to be fair, like you have to sit. you have to read a lot of documents could totally understand. but they they put them suitcase. i just i'm them in the suitcase. i just i'm just it at home just going to read it at home when i'm sat on sofa. i've when i'm sat on the sofa. i've got feet up. i need to got my feet up. i need to properly read are you properly read this. are you saying this because you've taken all those gb news home saw all those gb news mugs home saw you that. now got to set. you do that. now got to set. i mean, it's pretty embarrassing. just the democrats have mean, it's pretty embarrassing. just going the democrats have mean, it's pretty embarrassing. just going so1e democrats have mean, it's pretty embarrassing. just going so muchnocrats have mean, it's pretty embarrassing. just going so muchnoctrumpve mean, it's pretty embarrassing. just going so muchnoctrump with been going so much on trump with this. you know, they've this. but, you know, they've they've themselves. they've done it themselves. i mean, did of mean, although did sort of obfuscate months and try obfuscate for 18 months and try and them off. what you're and put them off. what you're meant to do, apparently, is if you caught documents, you get caught with documents, if mistake, you're meant if it is a mistake, you're meant to say, oh, i'm so sorry, he's sealed straight away. sealed them straight away. settlements, trump settlements, i hid. but trump didn't i that was didn't do that. i think that was the issue wasn't it? trump stopped all the progress, stopped all the progress, stopped trying stopped people from trying to get his home. he also got a get into his home. he also got a huge amount documents. now
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huge amount of documents. now get he like joe biden, get me wrong, he like joe biden, should as should also be investigated as quickly everybody quickly possible. everybody should find out should be investigated. find out who is guilty. who is innocent who is guilty. what if they don't? but joe biden has taken fewer documents. and it was and the second it was discovered, he very discovered, he was he was very cooperative. so is cooperative. so there is a difference i think he's done also. mean, biden, i don't also. i mean, joe biden, i don't want be mean, but forgets want to be mean, but he forgets a lot of things. yeah i mean it's is like dad it's like it's is like his dad it's like well dad you start well his dad thought you start your when you grandad your granddad when you grandad gets starts wandering gets old, he starts wandering around with his trousers and, book and wanders out. book shorts on and wanders out. and call old people and when you call old people that got bit mental. have that got a bit mental. have you seen coat? i left my nuclear. seen my coat? i left my nuclear. i mean he he mix up his wife i mean he he did mix up his wife and sister. is that right? and his sister. is that right? so we've all done that. we've all that. also did, all done that. and he also did, as says, he out the name as dianne says, he out the name of someone died before. that of someone who died before. that was here. was embarrassing. is she here. no, dead. sweetie , no, she's dead. ted, sweetie, it's look nsa, like, if he it's just. look nsa, like, if he was just a normal, i would be thinking wouldn't even thinking that i wouldn't even mention it. but the fact that he has got the nuclear codes does make it does make me a little make me it does make me a little bit anyway, we're make me it does make me a little bit to anyway, we're make me it does make me a little bit to move anyway, we're make me it does make me a little bit to move onrway, we're make me it does make me a little bit to move onrway,toz're make me it does make me a little bit to move onrway, to the going to move on now to the independent celibacy, the
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independent celibacy, all the rage diane . right. rage these days, diane. right. i don't think so. no, that's i'm going to say so. the independent has got this headline, no sex, please. we're millennials, celibacy has become all the rage among young people . no. now, i'm among young people. no. now, i'm sorry , but i've read this and sorry, but i've read this and i know young people and. this to me sounds , like just another fat me sounds, like just another fat diet book just for your vagina . diet book just for your vagina. but this kind of plays into idea of incel culture , like this idea of incel culture, like this idea of, no, i'm celibate , which is of, no, i'm celibate, which is actually a word which is associated with a religious practise, like why do you need to go around saying, i having sex with what they used to be a thing that silver ring thing where young people use oh why do they want their abstinence just don't do it why i have to talk about it why yes to announce it. firstly, this firstly, i should say this article talks millennials, article talks about millennials, right? now right? millennials are now pretty got pretty old. they've got mortgages. think we talk about mortgages. i think we talk about gen millennial gen z really? i'm a millennial often, yeah i know. and often, right? yeah i know. and i'm celibate , but not out i'm celibate, but not out choices because married. but choices because i'm married. but i a form of celibacy. i mean, it's a form of celibacy.
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yeah, i think yeah, but i think i think i think if this is how you guys have marriages, i'm only by have bad marriages, i'm only by the way, i just i, i have bad marriages, i'm only by the way, ijust i, i didn't have bad marriages, i'm only by the way, i just i, i didn't want to announce it tv that made to announce it on tv that made me. but anyway, think that me. but anyway, i think that this it and i'll put this i'll read it and i'll put what i cancelled sex. now is what i cancelled in sex. now is this what they're trying to do? you call cancel sex. but you call it cancel sex. but i think if this is going on, it's definitely a very thing. it's not meant definitely aren't going minute. going well, wait a minute. because the answer is because what about the answer is yes, involuntary yes, an incel is, an involuntary celibate. so they're the ones who say, oh, no, i don't have sex because there chads and. sex because there are chads and. the women, they say they want sex, but women won't allow sex, but that women won't allow them have because they're them to have sex because they're being weird . okay. being creepy and weird. okay. there many reasons why there might be many reasons why that would be the case, but but this just about sex. this isn't just about sex. i mean, there been loads mean, there have been loads study talked about how study which talked about how alcohol consumption, drug consumption these stuff consumption, all of these stuff that the younger that basically the younger generations, they're quite people, they're almost materialistic, they're like monks. but you know, monks. yeah, yeah. but you know, i a lot this to do with i think a lot of this to do with l, i think a lot of this to do with i, it's to do with behaviour when people dating because when people are dating because i know people who are millennials who dating and there is a
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who are dating and there is a lot ghosting, there's a lot lot of ghosting, there's a lot of very quickly and a of sex very quickly and then a lot of ghosting and that's what of sex very quickly and then a lo repeatedly|g and that's what of sex very quickly and then a lo repeatedly brought1at's what of sex very quickly and then a lo repeatedly brought in's what of sex very quickly and then a lo repeatedly brought in theset is repeatedly brought in these examples article examples throughout this article about having sex about people are having sex that's something they never heanng that's something they never hearing the again. hearing from the person again. they've and it's they've just given up and it's very isn't it? so know very rude isn't it? so know something, it's just something, you know, it's just it's quite easy. you might not be interested after the sex. it isn't good. so why don't isn't very good. so why don't you just give feedback and you know, them mark? we know, give them a mark? we should tripadvisor's. should have tripadvisor's. that's idea. how not? that's a great idea. how not? rate sweetie how rate it online, sweetie how about the person who got him a rating personally? yeah just not online. i just. rating personally? yeah just not online. ijust. guys rating personally? yeah just not online. i just. guys think it's so. it's so . anyway, we're going so. it's so. anyway, we're going to move on now to next which is the male misogynistic influences are influences sorry i'm being accused of taking over social media done with the blog i love a me this in as i used to be a misogynist stick influencer myself all my expertise yes no but listen this is this this is this is serious story misogynistic men making money for social media giants. you
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know tik tok youtube continue to host andrew tate influencers a massive millions of fans and charging for on japan for tips on dominating women. so this is influencers giving advice out and i guess i can talk from an educated for once on this show and educate perspective this because i had a tv show the century was the same thing to teach in men to how pull women but wasn't teaching them how to dominate . oh no no not at all. dominate. oh no no not at all. and this is this is my point on this. so from from my perspective when i had them on that it was done with confidence, you know, taking the man giving makeover, man giving him a makeover, making him look better, giving him and then the him confidence. and then the jokes being to jokes and stuff and being to open conversation stuff open conversation and stuff that. this if the if that. right. but this if the if these influencers they were doing toxic horrible sort of yeah yeah the wrong the sort of stuff you don't want it's the between sort of that sort a funny kind of you know how it how to be a bit more attracted
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to the others. yeah. right. and, and the kind of, you know, the tom cruise character of magnolia the one who sort of teaches men how trick women. you get into how to trick women. you get into bad. mean, a difference here bad. i mean, a difference here down the massive difference here is that number one it's pervasive. so all it's all the children of gossip because of social media and i was saying to dan before this programme is that with these people like , that with these people like, people who call themselves toxic , to sounds like a , which to me sounds like a cream , an std, i that's what he cream, an std, i that's what he calls himself . he like, why calls himself. he like, why would you, brian? just us weird, isn't it, as well? so it's almost like revelling in the idea that you're doing is idea that what you're doing is yeah, the same. you have yeah, like the same. you have a dirty burger and that just means the is very greasy and give dirty burger and that just means the a very greasy and give dirty burger and that just means the a heartgreasy and give dirty burger and that just means the a heart attack.ind give dirty burger and that just means the a heart attack. this give dirty burger and that just means the a heart attack. this williive you a heart attack. this will poison your mind. but what i to tell you is that if all of these young boys getting into the young boys are getting into the idea are not a person, that idea that are not a person, that women are not as good as men, then when all these kids grow up, there's going to be women who aren't seen forjobs. i was saying this to him that they're
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not to hire people. they're not going to hire women. they're not going to hire women. they're not going to hire women. they're not going to ask to interview women and know a lot of women are and know what a lot of women are going be back in the going to be back in the workforce. and is very, workforce. and this is a very, very dangerous thing where it's going because this going coming from, because this strikes old strikes me very, very old fashioned men and what fashioned views of men and what it they're saying it well, what they're saying that coming from is like that it's coming from is like this somehow boys have the sense of and they're of masculinity and they're looking role looking for masculine role models. and i'm fortunately, these people are pumping out like you could be a man, but the way they're saying that you should be a man is very cold. when you look at all things they say there is up slightly no no more so. but this is nothing about being lost. a really interesting point, though isn't it? that, you know, i spoke it? is that, you know, i spoke to christina hoff sommers in an american academic about this about are about the way that boys are often demonised. they don't often demonised. if they don't behave, behave like behave, if they behave like boys. words, having boys. in other words, having socialised, you know, rough, tumble, of thing tumble, play, that kind of thing and sort frowned and they're sort of frowned upon. therefore, create upon. and therefore, you create a vacuum for this kind of toxicity within the discourse is toxicity within the discourse is to come gain and gain to come in and gain and gain some foothold. is there not
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some sort foothold. is there not something definitely something in that? definitely i mean, that story mean, i remember that story where made of boys where they made a load of boys stand in a school and stand up in a school and apologised the being boys apologised to the for being boys right. like you right. pulling because like you don't know what those kids have done you make a load of done you just make a load of kids feel bad way they were kids feel bad the way they were born insane. so kind born are insane. so that kind behaviour has. but then there's a place for that tissue down as well as in that because you know, might say like it's really terrible for a guy get go terrible for a guy get to go onune terrible for a guy get to go online and make a lot money online and make a lot of money by saying got to by saying that you've got to dominate whatever or dominate women or whatever or calling themselves toxic, whatever. it's free whatever. yeah but it's free speech. it's free speech. speech. yeah, it's free speech. i just think my, my views on these, my, views this these, my, my views on this particular thing has changed as i've the years. i've matured over the years. i'll that before i'll sign that as well before know i've two daughters know i've got two daughters myself and what i thought myself now. and what i thought funny and etc. back then is different and simply different now. and i simply think that you're giving think that if you're giving advice, advice advice, if you're giving advice to that's anything beyond to lads that's anything beyond how they can better themselves. like confident and looking , how like confident and looking, how they can better themselves , how they can better themselves, how to manipulate people or anything thatis to manipulate people or anything that is wrong. yeah, because ten
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years time, if these boys are thinking this way , you'll girls thinking this way, you'll girls aren't going to get jobs because they're going to be in sport. interviewed by these boys ago go yeah, but women aren't as good men and then they're not going to get jobs. okay. we're going to get jobs. okay. we're going to on now matt and to move on now to matt and sainsbury's, the room. sainsbury's, not the room. what's about, diane? what's this about, diane? my god.so what's this about, diane? my god. so did a poster. yeah. sainsbury's make clothes. and that poster said, for walks in the park or strolls after dark, which i read is something sort of romantic . my husband and i, of romantic. my husband and i, we go for a little strolls at night—time. we like to run with up night—time. we like to run with up in love foxes. night—time. we like to run with up in love foxes . we run up and up in love foxes. we run up and down cars . well, no, it's just down cars. well, no, it's just a woman made a joke. she made a joke. the joke said, oh, they think we stroll in the dark , think we stroll in the dark, which is obviously a reference to the fact that women have been murdered for walking home alone at night . but sainsbury's aren't at night. but sainsbury's aren't alluding anything like, well, alluding to anything like, well, this literally made a joke this woman literally made a joke about it because saw that she made the connection and tweeted a joke . and as you were saying a joke. and as you were saying about when do something which
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could go viral online and you don't necessarily kind of realise the impact and now is blown up and now the metro is saying that sainsbury's post receives criticism for for, not considering women safe . but to considering women safe. but to be fair, this is one tweet that's got blown out of proportion and even the woman who tweeted it herself has written underneath it this was a joke that not the case. just like it's a it's a news outlet, just finding a tweet and turning it into i thought this is weird and i, i neveri didn't think and i, i never i didn't think i'd come from for this angle on this one. but i've got a little bit this because the, the bit on this because the, the whoever this was clearly written by a man because . i don't think by a man because. i don't think a woman would silly enough to a woman would be silly enough to write. think it is. write. and it is i think it is. and this is going to sound vital. come then i'm going and this is going to sound vitsoundne then i'm going and this is going to sound vitsound bite. then i'm going and this is going to sound vitsound bite. butzn i'm going and this is going to sound vitsound bite. but i| i'm going and this is going to sound vitsound bite. but i don going and this is going to sound vitsound bite. but i do think|g to sound bite. but i do think it's in bad taste really, because, you know, it's just stupid because there are security. that security. we don't just that women for strolls at women don't go for strolls at night after dark on their own and there's a picture of a woman on her own just you know, on her own it's just you know, it's just stupid marketing. but
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i do you do go for i'm sorry, but i'm a woman and i go for walks after dark but i agree with you. yeah yeah. but you taste. yeah, i'm just careful. i mean, like, you can be as careful as you. you still get attacked. i think attacked. you still, i think there any intention to there was any intention to allude shows dark allude i think shows after dark romantic. don't think romantic. yeah i don't think that what they were alluding to i just think the at work so whoever done it is works in marketing and it's just oh maybe just paddy's joke guess just paddy's joke and i guess right we're on to the right we're going on to the sunday now, young sunday telegraph now, young people satanism, people turning to satanism, a youth happening in satanism . youth happening in satanism. this is just mental model with stories of just crazy young , the stories of just crazy young, the young sacrifice, their belief in god on the altar of satanism leaders in the religion of religion claim opportunities for people to engage in activism issues such as like gender and sexuality opinion. what they're basically saying is saying because god doesn't like guys, that people are going like people that are gay or, you know
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activists and stuff like that. i decided worship satan instead. i think that satan , particularly think that satan, particularly pro—gay rights , i wouldn't have pro—gay rights, i wouldn't have thought he was . i don't think thought he was. i don't think he's pro anything. but, you know. what? it's bad and god . know. what? it's bad and god. well i mean to them . yeah, yeah. well i mean to them. yeah, yeah. i mean the idea is they're trying to provide an alternative like like you were saying like there is a vacuum sometimes because the church of england obviously religion is going down because people don't want to turn up to church . and these turn up to church. and these people are offering alternative where they say that in terms of satanism, we ask to look at yourself as a divine. are they joking ? well, look , this is the joking? well, look, this is the place. my favourite bit about because this religion is obviously got a pr department and they're like, look, virgin chalices of blood belief in the actual devil, you know and killing people now that sort so paul to paul well didn't do that they don't do that what's the point being a satanist you know get to drink virgins. well if, i was signing up to be a satanist.
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that's what i'd want, you know, write rosemary's baby the exorcist, that kind of stuff. right. mean, great right. i mean, those great films. they actually films. but are they actually that worshipping no that worshipping satan is no longer satanism. mean, longer part of satanism. i mean, that's i don't know that's a rebrand. i don't know what's got their minds right. what's got on their minds right. yeah. also as i've said yeah. but also as i've said before, satan meant before, the word satan meant messenger of god. so it actually could mean an angel. satan like it was a fallen angel. and who knows? you say to them what i say to them, really identifies right. exactly what. clearly. i mean, is true all mean, if it is true that all these sort sort of gender nebulous individuals are attracted satanism it attracted to satanism, it doesn't sense, but doesn't make any sense, but it doesn't make any sense, but it doesn't make any sense, but it doesn't make sense so much so that i'm going move on. i don't know it part three. i'm know that. is it part three. i'm putting this. but putting a stop to this. but coming up after the break, we've got neighbours banter with an ai queen and near—death experiences . what more could you require in minute .
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welcome back to headline news. your first look at sunday's newspapers and we're going to the times now. and if you ever fancied an evening chat an ai queen elizabeth ii this has you covered apparently . okay so yes covered apparently. okay so yes . lets you banter with the queen churchill and shakes beer himself. well i quite fancy , but himself. well i quite fancy, but i doubt that the machine will be able to help me do that. well the moment what it is that you have type to them. yes. what they've done is they have taken all these and all these words that said by these famous people and they have put them into this ai, then predicts what the ai, which then predicts what the famous person would have said. right, of course . what you're right, of course. what you're going to end up with. i mean,
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you could end up with a predictive text model, which i don't know about you you don't know about you if you have. you ever that have. have you ever played that where just push the next where you just push the next word your predictive send word on your predictive and send it friend? you end up it to your friend? you end up with a of tripe. it's with a load of tripe. it's brilliant. yes you could end up with also you've got with that. but also you've got the where are going to start pushing human emotion onto this. i ai system. yes where they say no, i'm really talking to shakespeare. i think he's trapped in. is that is that a risk then are we going to start? we're talking to these people. i've just this just reminds me to terminator. oh, it's to film terminator. oh, it's yeah. you start you start by talking to shakespeare. the next thing know you're dead. shakespeare an shakespeare turns up with an uzi. uzi and, you know, uzi. with an uzi and, you know, get chopper i worry about get in the chopper i worry about this stuff like the computers like being able to think and mimi i mean it makes me feel old. when i was a kid, we just spoke to each other. but i mean, is yes. like his grandad. yeah. what's that ? it this stuff is what's that? it this stuff is that there's more to this . this
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that there's more to this. this stuff can be used in business. this stuff be used to shoot kids then like there's loads basically going to take basically it's going to take over the world. yeah it is. to take over the world. you heard it we're going move it here first. we're going move on sunday express. on now to the sunday express. parents use phones to parents want to use phones to track now got track children. now you've got kids it's good idea. kids. yeah, it's a good idea. yes parents . wow, look so yes parents. wow, look so parents split over whether to check children on their phones is it wrong to track your teens . parents are divided over the subject mums are divided over it's wrong to track your children so there's this technology that you implement on the phone. yes not going to but it's for teenage kids and you know where they've gone that's not but you're encroaching on their privacy . well, put this their privacy. well, put it this way. if when i when i look back at when i was 18. yeah if my mum knew what i was up to and where i was and what i was doing, i'll probably want to turn out this bad, but i mean, i've got two young daughters. i've got two young daughters. i've got two young and i don't young daughters and i don't think there's anything wrong with having tracker your
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with having the tracker on your phone up until a certain phone up and up until a certain age check they are age and you can check they are if they're home time or if they're not home in time or if they're not home in time or if get abducted, that could if they get abducted, that could help find. do you think that part of becoming an adult and becoming independent is that parents to trust parents have to learn to trust and let you off and do and to let you go off and do never teenagers, never never trust teenagers, never mean when my mother , me mean no. but when my mother, me when she was growing up in dairy like go at two like her parents let go at two years and wander around the years old and wander around the streets and then come back in the know. that the evening, you know. be that was she was she was was yeah she was she was with the sisters brothers but the sisters and brothers but even like things we even so know like things we trust more back then people trust kids more back then people turned out more right. no people no know whether people no i don't know whether people necessarily out more. necessarily turned out more. okay. they trusted. but okay. because they trusted. but why it's really interesting about this article in the express that amount of express is that the amount of kids like to track their kids who like to track their mum. that's the other mum. i think that's the other thing. start tracking thing. kids start tracking their parents. have parents. yeah and the kids have been the parents to see been tracking the parents to see what they're up to, how wow tell that extramarital affair uncovered well uncovered by the child. well exactly . i just you know, exactly. i just think, you know, trust kids a bit no, trust your kids a bit more. no, no, i think i think it can help. but. okay there we go. this is
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why will never have children anyway. under the sun on the graph and ever wondered what happens . some people happens after death. some people have , right? oh yeah. have found, right? oh yeah. well, according to the telegraph, one in five people. so you got a 20% chance, guys revived after cardiac arrest report a near—death experience. wow. yes so now there's evidence of near—death experiences . well, of near—death experiences. well, what they've said is that that's the 20% and they all very, very different is a unique in a conscious but it's like floating out the body kind of thing yes they appear out of their body of them say they're attached to their body by a cord . yeah. they their body by a cord. yeah. they can see the cord and that very . can see the cord and that very. different. and this is the first time that they've actually studied these and the brain record experiences the brainwave changes so it's very easy to be cynical about this. but you know, dan, i think there could be something in this. there's a study saying this a lot study now saying that this a lot of people experiencing the same kind isn't the thought. kind of thing isn't the thought. i you yeah i don't know you know. yeah i mean, do you believe in the
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afterlife? yeah i've had many a body on different substances . body on different substances. well, there we go. so, you know, it anything. yeah, it could anything. but. yeah, i don't know . it's i there's don't know. it's i think there's something it. there something to it. there definitely is. people often wake up profoundly changed no longer fearing death and determined to live life. almost live a better life. it's almost like some kind of like there's some kind of inbuilt where you have a inbuilt system where you have a near—death experience. you become very calm. you go from not good. it could, as john said, just drugs . but the said, just the drugs. but the interesting thing is i will be serious on it for second. the interesting thing is, is that all of experiences, a lot all of these experiences, a lot of are really similar. so of them are really similar. so that doesn't it that says something doesn't it does. think it's very although does. i think it's very although there are a lot of drugs in hospitals. so maybe it is exactly outlined exactly what you outlined earlier. is end of the earlier. that is the end of the show. you so much to my show. thank you so much to my brilliant dan o'reilly and diane spencer and you remember the headuneis spencer and you remember the headline is we'll be back at 11:00 tomorrow. it's going be 11:00 tomorrow. it's going to be leo kearse karima . and by leo kearse and karima. and by the , this show is going to the way, this show is going to be repeated at 1:00 and at 5 am. and you might be watching it then. and if you are, then up
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the dup has warned the prime minister against caving in to the eu demands over the northern ireland protocol . good morning. ireland protocol. good morning. it's 6:00 on sunday, the 15th of january. this is breakfast on gb news with ellie and paul. here are your top stories this morning. rishi sunak is under pressure following reports he was softening people up for concessions that would leave the northern ireland protocol intact.it northern ireland protocol intact. it comes as the foreign secretary prepares for further
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