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tv   Headliners  GB News  January 17, 2023 11:00pm-12:01am GMT

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good evening. you're with gb news in a moment headlines. but first let's bring you the latest news headline this hour and february , likely to be a month february, likely to be a month of disruption to public services as schools and the rail network, as schools and the rail network, as well as nurses and civil service is all plan to stage industrial action. train drivers with the rmt and aslef unions will be striking on the first and 3rd of february in a long running overjobs, pay and conditions , the action coincides conditions, the action coincides with 100,000 civil servants walking out from jobs. meanwhile, more than 70,000 university staff , the university
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university staff, the university and college union will stage the first of 18 days of strike, as well as teachers . the national well as teachers. the national education union for seven days in february and march in a dispute overpay . well, also in dispute overpay. well, also in the news today, the home secretary says the independent inquiry looking into the police officer who murdered sarah everard will. also consider the crimes of the former met police officer david carrick the home officer david carrick the home office has launched a review of pubuc office has launched a review of public standards . make sure public standards. make sure officers who are not to serve the public can be sacked . that's the public can be sacked. that's after the former officer pleaded guilty to 49 offences, including of rapes over an 18 year period .today of rapes over an 18 year period . today he was sacked by the metropolitan police at a misconduct hearing held in his absence . now the uk and the absence. now the uk and the united states have reaffirmed their support for ukraine in its war against russia . james war against russia. james cleverly held talks washington today, including meeting the us
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secretary of state antony blinken before he travelled to meet his canadian counterpart cleverly. and blinken said they remained committed to supporting for as long as it takes. the uk government to supply challenges to battle tanks to the war torn country, with hopes the united states will also announce further assistance in the coming days. further assistance in the coming days . president putin is , due to days. president putin is, due to make what's called a big announced tomorrow on the ongoing with ukraine. what we see is dozens of countries supplying ukraine with weapons and enforcing sanctions against russia and i pay particular tribute to the united states of the largest military and economic donor. our friends in ukraine reinforcing this country's long standing commitment , country's long standing commitment, long standing commitment, long standing commitment to protecting and opposing tyranny wherever it rears its ugly head everyday
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speaking there. well, entertainment news to end this bulletin. madonna has announced a worldwide to celebrate her career music, which has spanned more than decades. the time grammy award winning icon will put on shows in 35 cities around the world, saying it's a chance to give my fans the show they've all been waiting for. madonna's so—called celebration tour as it'll be known, kicks off this july in canada , stopping off in july in canada, stopping off in the uk at, the london 02 arena in the uk at, the london o2 arena in october . the uk at, the london o2 arena in october. madonna has sold than 300 million records over the course of career, making her the course of career, making her the best female music artist of all. that's set you up . date on all. that's set you up. date on tv, online and dub plus radio with gb news. now it's time for headliners . with gb news. now it's time for headliners. thank you, with gb news. now it's time for headliners . thank you, polly with gb news. now it's time for headliners. thank you, polly. hello. welcome to headliners. we
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will expertly dissecting wednesday newspapers. i'm your surge and simon evans my tools this evening leo kearse and lewis schaefer . first let's have lewis schaefer. first let's have a quick consultation to see what wednesday's front pages have in store us. the daily mail leads with strip the rapist typically of his with strip the rapist typically of hi s £22,000 pension. the of his £22,000 pension. the telegraph if have trans law could turn parents into criminals the goes with clamour inquiry into officers who allowed rapists to stay in the met and greta thunberg future. they're detained at a coal mining protest in germany or rather being led away from one the mirror have idiotic bosses refuse nurses a fair deal offer £40 an hour to those who cross a picket line at times goes with don't let them eat cake sweet treats . the office are like treats. the office are like passive smoking , says food
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passive smoking, says food standards chief . and there's standards chief. and there's another picture of greta quite cheerful as she is carted away on her beer . cheerful as she is carted away on her beer. and finally, the daily huge if. true. on her beer. and finally, the daily huge if . true. the truth daily huge if. true. the truth is out there are there and there and there the star always breaking ranks there . those were breaking ranks there. those were your front pages. let's a look inside . so we begin by looking inside. so we begin by looking at the front page wednesday telegraph leo so this leads with the big story the trans law could turn parents criminals these are they're looking at outlawing conversion therapy for homosexual and for transgender people as well the conversion is when you try and convince somebody . so for when you try and convince somebody. so for gay when you try and convince somebody . so for gay people , when you try and convince somebody. so for gay people , you somebody. so for gay people, you try and convince them they're not gay. it used to be done, you know, with prayer or, you know, just a few decades ago it was donein just a few decades ago it was done in quite barbaric ways. lou
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reed, the singer of the velvet, had electric therapy in the people and showed them, which isn't going it's not going to stop your change sexuality. it's going to introduce you to a kink . you know, he did end up married to laurie anderson that obviously some extent for obviously worked some extent for him. but he wasn't gay anyway. he was just weird. yeah, yeah, yeah. he was just weird. yeah, yeah, yeah . and this is this is the yeah. and this is this is the thing. i mean, people who you know, when they're teens display , you know, display behaviour that's not your , you know, 1950s that's not your, you know, 1950s stereotype of being a man or a woman and currently a blue here teacher reader or liberal parent will leap on a teenager or that child and say oh you're definitely trans you've got to transition and they are convinced and then they're put in this pathway that they have to be affirmed and they have have the drugs and, the everything else to start to broadly speaking, the problem is what amounts to convert in therapy because the way that some people frame it would say
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that any attempt to convince a child that not actually trans that they're not being born into the right body that conversion therapy where you're framing which i have a lot of sympathy with, is say that anyone who with, is to say that anyone who is showing signs of a feminine boy, both boy, oh, must be trans. both these could be framed as conversion therapy in way gender ideologists of our health service and see that you know we must affirm any transgender child or teenager. but you know a lot of these behaviours, these expressions, there's been a huge rise in the number of transgender teens. but are they really transgender , just, you really transgender, just, you know, autistic or , you know, know, autistic or, you know, experimenting or doing something else? it does kind of look well, as the present government as if the present government have they on this have no where they stand on this at they flip back and at all. they flip back and forth. and what you forth. and i wonder what you think. lewis well, this reminds me, i'm and quite familiar with this the day this because back in the day conversion against conversion therapy was against cults if i can say, the cults like the if i can say, the moonies. yeah. you know like anybody who's anybody because kids taken in by kids used to be like taken in by these maybe if these people who were maybe if they to become like and they decided to become like and
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so they , their parents would so they, their parents would send somebody in and then there was big lawsuits. i don't think this needs need to have a this needs we need to be have a law have but there even law we have but i there was even carl sagan you remember him the he and he was a hero of. the left right. this was guy presenting cosmos. but was presenting cosmos. but he was like advocate for like a massive advocate for science age reason. science and the age of reason. and sweep he wrote and let's sweep away. he wrote a book the demon haunted book called the demon haunted world, which was about the last few to rid the world of few attempts to rid the world of superstition. hero of superstition. absolute hero of the talked lot the left. and he talked a lot about dangers affirmation about the dangers of affirmation . in there was a guy . and in therapy there was a guy who persuaded his who was who persuaded his therapist visited the therapist that he visited the astral other planets at astral like other planets at night, you know, by astral travel. and the therapist agreed to kind of like know encourage him thinking was all him into thinking it was all just but he needed he just nonsense. but he needed he needed slap to the head. but now this become the side of the this has become the side of the left. if you walk the left. yeah. if you walk the doctors see i think i'm doctors and see i think i'm a horse, you know, you'll be told oh no you, you're mentally ill if you into don't give the if you walk into don't give the address who can make address of somebody who can make you horse. mean, that's you a nice horse. i mean, that's happening, people dress happening, right? people dress up doses, you up missing doses, but, you know, the that
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the things that were traditionally mean gender traditionally seen mean gender dysphoria is still it's still registered a mental illness. registered as a mental illness. but for some we've got but for some reason we've got it. anything under this law it. and anything under this law , anything that doesn't affirm it, will, will be a crime. so if you're a therapist or a parent or doctor , you be able or a doctor, you won't be able to discuss the options of to even discuss the options of anything other than, you know, full and anybody has any treatment and surgery to change it it could it's always bit a whole kettle of fish is that anything is anytime you say something against what somebody is doing back in the day is like in my day it was they went against the religious nuts now the government are religion. well there's a picture of kemi badenoch on the front page so that that this that gives me hope that this will sorted in the mirror. will get sorted in the mirror. meanwhile have a wider issue facing health service, possibly a more serious one. seriously? well it's i mean, it's i don't know why . this news that know why. this is big news that the are on strike and if the nurses are on strike and if the nurses are on strike and if the nurses are on strike and if the nurses on strike, they the nurses are on strike, they need someone to be nurses so they're willing to pay people a little just show to little bit extra just to show to work. they're paying
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work. yeah. and they're paying them hour break them £40 an hour to break a picket line, deserve a little extra pay for saying. exactly. i mean, you have got to try and incentivise because is incentivise that because it is risky and obviously, there's a certain you know, certain amount of, you know, scoundrels temporary. scoundrels and it's a temporary. yeah it's not a full time thing. so mirror is saying it's idiotic with that their preference be that the people go untreated if the hospitals the nurses want people to die. yeah yeah it's happening here i don't know why the nurses like, you know, play a trick and register with these agencies . go back a trick and register with these agencies. go back in an hour and £40 an hour for four for this penod £40 an hour for four for this period of time. and then go back down to an hour. and then we down to £38 an hour. and then we have the of the match as well to have the of the match as well to have a view on that. lewis yes, i do, because, know, this is i do, because, you know, this is another school issue. another old school issue. everything old everything everything is old school back. school now. it's all back. i remember being quite in love with madonna there with the with madonna and there is mean, seen a few is i mean, i've seen a few people twittercomplaining people on twitter complaining that she's been she's under scrutiny . she's coming she's scrutiny. she's coming in. she's in it's her in the sixties. it's her anniversary. oh can she anniversary. and oh can she still do it? can she pull it off? and springsteen doesn't get
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this. mccartney don't get this. and mccartney don't get this. and mccartney don't get this. a good this. and i know, but a good reason isn't there. they don't tend perform a bustier tend to perform in a bustier with bunch of like gaultier so with a bunch of like gaultier so pyramid she's going to pyramid whoops she's going to need that yeah mostly the she's of g pays for the best i mean if nothing else she is a walk in the door with a lot young the door with a lot of young people. it's not only women who get i get lot of get that i get a lot of complaints that yeah complaints about that yeah there's hanging out with young people covered so we go to the times now leo and we got this don't let them eat cake i mean we were going to talk about that later, but you want to pick that up from here? yeah. i mean, basically bring a cake into the office is now seen passive smoking. oh there's nothing like passive smoking because you don't go around don't you don't go around forcing a small amount cake in everybody's mouth. you know, people choice. the people have the choice. well the choice a cake or not choice whether be a cake or not anyway we're talking anyway i think we're talking about will come. about that later we will come. i've about that later we will come. pve got about that later we will come. i've got levelling up as i've also got a levelling up as 2019 so soon next to tories on a gauging up or stepping up it's engaging yes rubbish . i engaging app. yes rubbish. i mean getting up was a bit off,
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but gauging yes, it's terrible. nobody like when you write it down, it looks it looks like doesit down, it looks it looks like does it say gag logic or gagging either i don't know why people keep voting for politicians to change and to do things. you want to vote for a politician that does nothing yet does that just abolishes government. yeah and all all these and all these all these governments try and do things governments to try and do things well certainly was a tory well certainly if it was a tory it a tory government get it was a tory government and get levelling essentially levelling up is essentially if it a labour government is it was a labour government is about meddling. if you want labour you meddling. labour you want meddling. so levelling up at work you're right. yeah. you level right. yeah. how do you level something up. how do level something up. how do you level something up. how do you level something just level something down. you just level it the way people talk it the way the way people talk about the principle of levelling up far understood was up as far as i understood it was to opportunity to redistribute and opportunity out capital and after out of the capital and after the north, right. that was basically suppressed wealth and capital. the that. if the market will do that. if you interfere because property pnces interfere because property prices london prices and rents in london become completely for anyone who is earning 50 grand a year. and so they all ship out north that would that would do you would just that would do if you just let that work but if you want to argument from me because i'm give an
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i'm not going to give you an argument mean come on to the melvyn lewis as it were the male i i mean this is i this is i mean this is absolutely because guy who absolutely because this guy who i've just a little bit about he's done some very bad things over a very long time and he was was policeman. yeah. and they was a policeman. yeah. and they what to is they what they want to do is they want to say he because he's a bad man, he should not get his pension. things pension. but those two things related. you penalised related. should you penalised with pension . well with your state pension. well i suppose question suppose the question is whether whether crimes place within whether his crimes place within the which is it seems the workplace which is it seems to be a bit of a grey area. exactly. well he was he was a policeman and did you that policeman and did you that police thing to take advantage of people so do you remember the line duty serious is on two line of duty serious is on two of our series five now but division one the line of duty was a trap. he realised he was about to be caught. he'd been extraordinarily corrupt. he extraordinarily corrupt. and he broken. rules. and broken. all kinds of rules. and the real thing was he had to be killed of duty. then killed in the line of duty. then his would still get his his family would still get his pension all the way up. isn't that bit of worry for you. that a bit of worry for you. remember, shipman didn't remember, harold shipman didn't die time. his die like just in time. give his
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wife the state. people said he was a monster if he was still around people, if he was still ready to be working for the kidney , the government , that is kidney, the government, that is true, made . yeah. ken bruce, are true, made. yeah. ken bruce, are we going to mention him. he's come from lay radio two. is that disaster for them? he's 71. that's probably old enough. he's not he's not dead . he's not not he's not dead. no, he's not dead. moving to on some dead. he's moving to on some commercial channels and he's going take pop master going to take pop master with him. that. and him. i will miss that. and finally, daily start to finally, the daily start to understand but what was understand this. but what was the front something to do the front pages? something to do with and the of with the bible and the book of so yeah the daily stars so yeah so the daily stars a story about about government covering ufo unidentified covering up ufo unidentified flying objects which you know if we ask the to read the files they become air force or ufo is isuppose they become air force or ufo is i suppose yeah but yeah i mean this has been going on since i was since i could read i've been reading i remember it 14 times way back in the nineties was reading about ufo cover ups. i thought there is properly thought if there is properly kind of old school and vintage. yeah ufo . in
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kind of old school and vintage. yeah ufo. in real kind yeah yeah. the ufo. in real kind of warm glow for that well that is all for part one those are the front pages with joining us in a couple of minutes we will look at the inside the end of segregation start of neurodivergent police as neurodivergent police forces as opposed usual divergent opposed to the usual divergent police a great police forces. and a great reason to go politics, see reason to go into politics, see a couple of minutes .
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welcome back to headline is with me simon evans my two comedy commentator leo kearse and schaefer tonight so wednesdays guardian and does diversity and diversity lead to diversity and maybe diversity. oh yeah none of that means anything. but it's provocative . i tell you, it's provocative. i tell you, it's smart. it'sjust provocative. i tell you, it's smart. it's just it's on intelligence. that's why people don't like you. it just university is becoming this this kind of it's like a such a it's
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one of those words like if you say it often enough, it just turns into nothing. it's a spin. and that's what it is. it's the guardian spinning it, spinning something potentially something could be potentially horrible if people don't like into something . says that into something. it says that ethnic segregation in england and on the wane. and wales is on the wane. research finds that what they're finding that some finding out is that some neighbourhoods becoming way neighbourhoods are becoming way more way more diverse, which means way more diverse, which means way more minority ethnic. more diverse, which means way more minority ethnic . yeah, so more minority ethnic. yeah, so they don't mean like brixton is becoming more white racists, which happened, you know, but that's not what they're talking about right now. it's not at all because they call it they call it the rainbow, but it doesn't imply any increase in orange, white. no yellow, yellow, just no. wizard of york, brown and black . there's a 10% black. so there's been a 10% increase diversity , which increase in diversity, which means that actually means that areas are becoming less and less white. and it is still the big major cities, isn't it? although there are one or two funny ones i think boston and lincolnshire, it's become racially diverse. yeah from a, from a low base but yeah. tenfold. yeah. tenfold yeah. tenfold. better black people instead
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better ten black people instead of one. yeah. yeah. well this is the thing, i mean it's diversity is worried is strength. i mean i'm worried britain become too strong britain could become too strong so good could could cause so much good could could cause problems. mean, this is problems. but i mean, this is this is one of these things that depends as you mention it depending how it's present depending on how it's present today. exists doesn't today. yeah. exists or doesn't exist you when people exist. so you know when people see great it's see london so great because it's so there's is so diverse and there's is a cultural melting pot of people from all the world here. yeah, that's but if somebody that's good. but if somebody says, way it says, i don't like the way it doesn't , it doesn't feel english doesn't, it doesn't feel english anymore . yeah, it's too fair. anymore. yeah, it's too fair. then, then they're like, oh, you're being racist. it's not. they're identifying the same phenomenon, but you're allowed to either be neutral about it or happy about it. but is the same with if white people to an area then that's bad because is the way that people are automatically bad. so yeah. and do have huge think pieces in the new yorker, in the atlantic and so on about that happening in parts francisco. oh, parts of san francisco. oh, i can't it. this used to can't believe it. this used to be a colombian neighbourhood. well, for 20 well, maybe for the last 20 years, not for like years, but not for like historically speaking. so is it wrong me to say that i like
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wrong for me to say that i like people to think it is? yeah. all right. they get away with it and gb but that's the only gb news. but that's the only place. do them anyway. place. you do like them anyway. they helpfully the they have helpfully included the places least diverse in places which least diverse in the country. allerdale copeland in that's lake in cumbria. that's the lake district. staffordshire district. the staffordshire moorlands which sounds moorlands, which sounds completely . the sort of place completely. the sort of place that there might be still try to a couple of bodies just to day three with wind whistling straight , a sturdy blackthorn straight, a sturdy blackthorn and redcar and cleveland , then and redcar and cleveland, then anglesey. anglesey yeah. so other words at the actual periphery of the entire. yeah, yeah. periphery of the entire. yeah, yeah . okay, big step. i mean yeah. okay, big step. i mean i do like interesting diverse neighbourhoods . ones i do like interesting diverse neighbourhoods. ones i find more worrying are the ones where you know if what don't mean ghetto ification if they don't mean that our whole neighbourhoods have become purely bangladeshi which feels like they have which kind feels like they have less chance of assimilation and more then maybe that is more trouble, then maybe that is . this . but there's always this suspicion that's how the word is. and i say that i like
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people. you are allowed to say that you like . yeah, you kind of that you like. yeah, you kind of rhythm . yeah. know you're saying rhythm. yeah. know you're saying that i wasn't saying that time was now leo and a different and arguably more profound kind of diversity is being sought by the police. they are looking for diversity of brain operating system those rates so police chiefs banks a plan to boost the number of neurodiverse recruits so there they're looking for true inclusion and acceptance of those who think they'll bring unique perspectives skills and talents while creating safe and judgement, free environment . i judgement, free environment. i mean, neurodiversity also includes people who think jesus includes people who think jesus in their sandwich toaster and speaks to them . so but they're speaks to them. so but they're talking about them primarily, i think talking to varieties and flavours , autism spectrum flavours, autism spectrum disorders. that's the word neurodivergent. now, mainly refers to asperger's or autism. so they're seeing people who can see patterns. yeah, for focus for long periods of time of levels of resilience are some of the skills and talents that you know certain types of autism. in
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facti know certain types of autism. in fact i worked in criminal intelligence and then i worked for intelligence consultancy for an intelligence consultancy it was a running joke that we were all autistic. yeah, i think a lot people now seem to identify as slightly autistic and seems me it has been and it seems to me it has been genuine success story, the degree longer a degree to which is no longer a stigma. of claim it stigma. a lot of people claim it almost little bit more. you almost a little bit more. you feel maybe really tackling feel maybe they really tackling maybe a bit too much. i i think what they're trying to associating with the rain associating autism with the rain man like that like these people are just like you know who i associate with. did you ever watch elementary? it was an american version of sherlock holmes sherlock holmes updated. sherlock holmes with jonny lee miller is sherlock. he was essentially sherlock. and he was essentially playing of spectrum, playing him as sort of spectrum, but compelling. he's but it was very compelling. he's very actor. and it very charismatic actor. and it was it was it was quite intense, i thought, because kind i thought, because you kind of you read the sherlock you if you read the sherlock holmes you could easily holmes stories, you could easily frame that seems to frame as you know, that seems to be what he is unbelievably . be what he is unbelievably. could you indifferent to how he is ? can i interrupt you could is? can i interrupt you could you do me a favour and run by these analogies before the show ? you can do a bit of egg on my
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face. as you know it's in elementary. you've got eight glorious seasons. mean, it'd glorious seasons. i mean, it'd be great they somebody who's be great if they somebody who's neurodivergent enables them to actually respond to crime and turn up and do some investigation, giving you a crime number. it's a little bit just picking up people are just picking up people who are less sympathetic . anyway, the less sympathetic. anyway, the telegraph now and patients on antidepressants have been warned against going cold turkey. yes, just three weeks after the end of christmas , after they would of christmas, after they would have been gone by now , actually. have been gone by now, actually. well, this is a telegraph ad. there's one in people at the there's one in six people at the press say the health health chiefs. wow. and can chiefs. wow. and i can understand because they're understand why, because they're constantly telling people that they're myself went they're depressed. i myself went into the doctor's office and within a second the doctor said to me, you were and gave me a prescription sati was annas and that was saying something citalopram, have you been in touch ? an ancient book, why touch? an ancient book, why magic isn't it collision? notice when i does that, another one of those references, i think maybe is another name for another book
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for matt merlin, i think. but yeah, go on. yeah, please. so and it says one in six are depressed now easily. one in ten. yeah. so that's like an of like 80% of something serious. but no, you're absolutely the doctors will prescribe antidepressants they try if they just this is because the happy people are dying. yeah right. so yeah. with all the happy people dying and leaving the depressed people, happy people walk around running that muscle running around with that muscle and mean. yeah, yeah, and so on you mean. yeah, yeah, yeah. must. and all of yeah. it must. yeah. and all of the are depressed or the people who are depressed or who antidepressants, who are on antidepressants, there's 8.3 million people in england, only depressants, two thirds of them are female . and thirds of them are female. and this, i think, shows the, you know, women aren't satisfied with modern life. it suits men . with modern life. it suits men. all this casual sex, drinking , all this casual sex, drinking, you know, when he goes with them, correlates even more than them, correlates even more than the sex breakdown is the political spectrum liberal women, as they call them in america , are the most. yeah, of america, are the most. yeah, of course, the liberal, you know. i know who the world i know exactly what everybody should be
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doing. own personal, doing. but in my own personal, i'm complete car crash right i'm a complete car crash right through. but i do think doctors should about prescribing should think about prescribing these because can be these things because it can be a lifetime, can it can be. and even the other kinds of drugs are really, you know, at a friend of mine, it was a who was given valium and it took forever to get off. i when i was given these pills, i went in, pick them up took the 28 pills them up and i took the 28 pills home and opened up the box. i home and i opened up the box. i said to myself, if i take this , said to myself, if i take this, i'm going to take this for the rest of life. and another two rest of my life. and another two and half years, they and a half years, yeah, they took and i took the took the picture and i took the pill and i walk to the toilet. i threw it in the toilet. good man. and one of those in the water supply i'm getting. yeah. with all the progesterone wednesdays now leo and an unusually assessment of the world's politically from the male body. he is the male is reporting from davos where demand from prostitute is skyrocketing during annual world economic forum . so do tell us economic forum. so do tell us this is what all the politics
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sessions and the leaders from all around world the business people they normally go into black hole of brian is this story is politics forensic i mean like basically go where the rich guys are going to have but you can you just wait, wait, wait. why why? why why did he just say that the people the same who have flooded today at davos are going to blackpool to the same class obviously these people are going after the services these are these women are ,700 for an hour or services these are these women are ,700 for an hour 0 r ,2,300 are ,700 for an hour or ,2,300 for the whole night, plus travel expenses, you've got to pay for a bus fare. and so yeah, that's that's where all your taxes are going. this what all these politicians in davos, they're all together to work out all getting together to work out how to make our lives worse. who are kind of? a gas stove. are you kind of? a gas stove. you've to eat in. you're not you've got to eat in. you're not allowed you know, allowed to have any. you know, a lot of, you know, central lot of, you know, gas, central heating. meanwhile, while they're and there was they're just and there was a photo don't suppose got photo i don't suppose we got a copy it but there was a photo copy of it but there was a photo in the mail. you want have a look on their site. you'll see it of i think of this one salami
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us who is one of the six workers and she is absolutely stunning. but more importantly her photograph like photograph you know, it's like it's like a photo it's like a like a photo shoot. it looks like klein, high it looks like calvin klein, high end, i mean, like they end, you know. i mean, like they have material. oh, have marketing material. oh, yeah. weren't wasn't yeah. they weren't wasn't snapped on the seafront davos you they're making lot you know and they're making lot of money. i mean, this is a studio switzerland it's studio in switzerland it's actually they still actually legal but they still they dress apparently one of one of the prosecutors since she dresses in an executive suit because to blend with because she wants to blend with all the it be a better all the wouldn't it be a better way. also way people go way. it's also way of people go for themselves , for to of themselves, commemorate school dignitaries, dignitaries well, that's probably more than 2300, isn't it ? what what are they going to it? what what are they going to see, like one of these high end prostitutes , i think is the most prostitutes, i think is the most , you know, driver heart attack halfway through. i'm sure that somebody be arranged for like no money there . you can't like money there. you can't like unless there's got be some business model. well, all i know is this is my girlfriend watches this show. right. and i just want to let you know, lily, that this that my little girlfriend
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lily maybe don't out. lily should maybe don't out. please wait. i made that up. my girlfriend on wednesdays times now louis for the first time since record china has been possibly cracked . well, as the possibly cracked. well, as the population falls in china for the first time in 60 years and that's it i mean i think that's good they mean they were trying to make the population drop forever and they've actually achieved it. and suddenly it's news. number one, you could not that anything that china says so we don't know if the population is dropping don't know that okay this lie and see this something they lie and see is happening because doesn't is happening because it doesn't make good they're make them look good they're going overtaken by india going to get overtaken by india which was populous country. so what how many troops do what how many how many troops do you defend? wasn't there you need to defend? wasn't there a here a few months a story did here a few months ago where another was in afghanistan? and afghanistan? it massively and no, not it was sri no, it was it was not it was sri lanka i think massively lanka i think was it massively underestimated the of underestimated the amount of population something population they or something like that? 10% they these are rough, and would rough, i think. and why would they then. well, it's it they say it then. well, it's it is interesting but they are they are extrapolating from
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are probably extrapolating from , you know, data they get in hospitals about the rate hospitals about the birth rate is rather big number sheer number people are number of people but they are able the birth. and able to monitor the birth. and this happening much this is happening pretty much the especially the world. yeah. and especially happening west as so our happening in the west as so our birthrate is so low we're facing a population cliff is because you know politicians politicians have a four year windows they're not looking to you know who's going replenish workforce in going to replenish workforce in 20 years time and yeah you're right since the american countries are only a few years ago, america was panicking because it's open border and all the guatemalans going to come in even have drop below even they have drop below replacement yeah. yeah, replacement level. yeah. yeah, it's mean it's nice to it's crazy. i mean it's nice to see falling in see the population falling in china reason other than , china for a reason other than, you caused . yeah, you know, human caused. yeah, communism caused . famine, communism caused. famine, absolutely true. it's extraordinary country for tinkering and failing though there's no question about that. pete zeihan is the guy to watch on youtube. if you want to get an assessment of demographics for the next couple of decades, bleak. that's all for part two. part three is going to rock, i
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assure , with twitter, taliban assure, with twitter, taliban racist facebook and kevin spacey back in court and on the award stage. we'll see you in a couple of minutes. yeah .
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welcome back to headliners. let's get straight back to it with wednesday's guardian. we have their characteristically fair minded approach to elon musk in the paper, keeping an eye taliban's twitter account. it . yes, a twitter account it seems. yes, a twitter account verification is bought by the taliban. you know , elon musk taliban. you know, elon musk changes. could buy blue changes. you could buy blue checkmark. so tesla the ones the taliban bought have appeared to have removed after people have been removed after people expressed outrage that the social media platform given them blue checkmarks . afghanistan's blue checkmarks. afghanistan's hardline islamist rulers. so we don't know who the real taliban are. no, i get the right advice
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from, you know want to be following the this the scriptures there is there is a certain rhythm and a certain timbre to a genuine tweet. but no nuclear identify this coming from the heart. i mean it's quite interesting . elon musk was quite interesting. elon musk was about a month ago of essentially ruining twitter driving into the ground everyone announced they were going to go set up on mastodon . i don't see much of mastodon. i don't see much of this exodus happening, and i think a lot of it is actually more functional than it used to be.the more functional than it used to be. the only thing i have felt, some of the older accounts, not the some of the i the taliban, some of the guys i used follow were they did used to follow who were they did transgress and now they're back. i know. feels a bit i don't know. it feels a bit weird some of i'm not weird mean some of them i'm not sure comfortable that i'm i sure i'm comfortable that i'm i don't know for their point view you it was harsh that they you know it was harsh that they were yeah i don't know were banned. yeah i don't know some these things it's like some of these things it's like playing net. playing tennis without net. yeah. should like yeah. jeremy, you should like there lines there are some lines you shouldn't because that shouldn't cross because that made quite. takes. it made it feel quite. it takes. it takes fun out of yeah. takes the fun out of it. yeah. and i think what this is so shocking is, is that, that it's a freedom of speech issue, but i
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don't see leo kearse being upset about he expressed any about this. if he expressed any concern taliban. the concern for the taliban. the taliban now. taliban are known now. they don't the taliban a don't know. the taliban have a right speak and have a right right to speak and have a right where is where is in all of this a right to verification and rather than the right speak, rather than the right to speak, it's right speak under it's your right to speak under a certain with certain kind certain banner with certain kind of medallion on. yeah, of little medallion on. yeah, typically traditionally typically and traditionally the blue checkmark actually blue checkmark is actually a white call it the blue white chap i call it the blue checks. they regarded checks. yes. they are regarded as yeah that's right. but as one. yeah that's right. but they're regarded being they're regarded as being usually pompous usually the slightly pompous arrogant journalist class. you know, it's a of irrelevant version of the taliban , but version of the taliban, but somebody opinion must be taken seriously because they've got one of these. oh i work for the tech desk at the new york. but anyway, wednesdays telegraph. this is yet another example of why onlyfans the new linkedin. i think . is why onlyfans the new linkedin. i think. is that why onlyfans the new linkedin. i think . is that correct? well, think. is that correct? well, this is one of those stories because it's at the world economic forum . they've got a economic forum. they've got a million people there and. and one of the guys is terry delaporte, who's from wipro. yeah is it why? i don't know
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them, apparently a big company. inever them, apparently a big company. i never heard of them. very big queenl i never heard of them. very big queer. i remember because that was the name of my french student when i was 14 and their books would go in school the rest of their tutors might have been with been named after that with claudette france. claudette and marie, france. yeah. don't been yeah. and you don't have been mentioned. teria you mentioned. teria and marie. you were so out of yeah, have were so out of it. yeah, i have a team, it? aren't you an a team, isn't it? aren't you an arsenal supporter. i know they're top of the legal. i went on yes i know that. on them. yes do i know that. anyway it's is that this anyway so it's is that is this guy from there he says that people aren't looking at the dude's says that the dude's email he says that the young people read remarks young people read the remarks young people read the remarks young people read their emails, got communicate with gen z on got to communicate with gen z on instagram . and he's like, this instagram. and he's like, this is guy, he's one of the is a guy, he's like one of the richest in the world richest people in the world probably. company probably. and company is complaining his staff complaining about his staff reading his email. why don't you just them to read the just tell ell them to read the email you to lose email i don't want you to lose your next email is going to your job. next email is going to be you see, you can't fire be fine. you see, you can't fire them because won't read the them because they won't read the email. still email. they'll still keep turning basically turning up. so basically it's just more because just one more thing because we've be nice to young we've got to be nice to young people. it does kind of feel to
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me like a decent sized corporation like wipro, whatever they're who would they're called, who i would imagine sort tech imagine fairly sort of tech savvy line savvy should have a direct line to their employees, don't. i mean, be email or mean, that would be email or instagram, should mean, that would be email or instheirm, should mean, that would be email or instheir own should mean, that would be email or instheir own like should mean, that would be email or instheir own like bespokeould be their own like bespoke service. you want to be like , service. you want to be like, you know, you get a little shock in your whole they shouldn't be part of their job yeah their email we know you have an email we all know you have an email we all know you have an email account is endlessly email account that is endlessly i don't amount of mail i mean don't amount of mail order companies all any time i've ordered a bracelet for my wife for christmas three years ago continually think they ago they continually think they may another say you what to may have another say you what to stop showing off. yeah but this is a security issues can't be sending messages on instagram c messages it could be it's not is a completely third party it makes snapchat is saying so good you get a message that disappears after 24 hours so it's like where was that meeting oh it's gone wednesdays telegraph and it seems now that the science museum is struggling to distinguish boys from girls might be a job for the victoria and albert just across
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and albert museum just across there might be returning to those values . yeah, the science those values. yeah, the science museum has removed a trans exclusive display after. i mean, when they see trans exclusion, it was trans inclusive . it's it was trans inclusive. it's just it is a display complaints that it was propaganda , not that it was propaganda, not science. so the cabinet displayed a fake penis to be worn on clothing as a as a packer to provide male appearance a compressed vest to flatten breasts as you look more male and also tasteless and patches which you know induce the changes your body your deeper voice and here in your chin to make you look a fella and it was titled a boy or girl and it was titled a boy or girl and displayed quotes describing the transition from the wrong body as hero's journey. these are these are quite politicised loaded term seeing as the wrong bodyis loaded term seeing as the wrong body is the being in does is not a scientific term and hero's journey. i mean the glorification this and making it seem you know they're making it the cool thing for kids to do and this is this is part of the problem this hero's journey in
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the science museum should be neil armstrong. shouldn't it really? arguably some of really? or arguably some sort of intrepid the intrepid explorer into the jungle something neil jungle or something neil armstrong transitions . yeah, arm strong transitions. yeah, transitions. armstrong transitions. yeah, transitions. then he's a hero. neil arms up a body strength yet neil arms up a body strength yet neil what do think lewis is i mean if you're a regular visitor to the science museum, i, i am. ibnng to the science museum, i, i am. i bring kids there to give them some ideas . yeah, it is, it's some ideas. yeah, it is, it's a fun place. i think it is a shame when these things get kind of co—opted into progressive activities, doesn't they? don't to know about that. i don't think it's that being co—opted it. i think this is what people believe now. just it's so deep. it would be even weird it would it would be even weird if it wasn't included in the science. liam imagine science. yeah. liam wow imagine they in which they they had a display in which they said of science and said the abuse of science and was and it was just and include it and included a scalp scalp and in science through the ages and in science through the ages and they would have they the angel of at auschwitz or whatever and up to the modern day they well i mean some people would that line every
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would draw that line every bit as conviction as as the as much conviction as as the saying a hero's journey . and saying is a hero's journey. and i think, you know, this display have come under any attacks any complaints. if they hadn't used these these loaded terms described it as a hero's journey, described it as the wrong . i mean, it's this is the wrong. i mean, it's this is the body and it's a journey is a journey you go on is there's procedures . and as they say, if procedures. and as they say, if it's the wrong body who made the mistake anyway wednesday's male has found a woman trying to combine art drama and astrophysics and found the project hampered by what else sexism , white supremacy . yeah. sexism, white supremacy. yeah. yes, it's mental i mean, i'm not allowed to say the word mental. it's basically it's saying that the astrophysicist moans her field is riddled riddled with white supremacy and sexism . and white supremacy and sexism. and it says this woman who's out there at the university at colorado college takes an unconventional approach to physics by comparing stars , physics by comparing stars, human stars to. oh, i didn't really understand that. i mean, she found one example. i've read the story. she one example of
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slightly kind of macho locker room slang being termed something about the certain kinds of stars with the bad of astrophysics or something. and ages ago it wasn't , it wasn't a ages ago it wasn't, it wasn't a recognised term exactly . recognised term exactly. somebody had you in an a bloke or somebody in the stars. the bad of this, it's not like widely used term the term this actually uses blue straggler which is a masculine hyper masculine term. and also you the myth of what it sounds a little bit of haemorrhoids or something. i don't know. what is that. could denote somebody that. that could denote somebody who maybe hard who maybe has a hard time getting disabled getting around. it's a disabled person white person or they have white dwarves , red giants. have dwarves, red giants. these have sort of white supremacist, black, white boy. oh, my god, space. the garage is the empty space, dark matter. the black . space, dark matter. the black. and she complains of the metaphors used to describe stars are often violent. it's like yeah because it's most violent and huge chemical changes in the universe and it's hard to communicate to me because when you look up at the night sky
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seems the most utterly serene thing. disney all these little twinkly dots. yeah. in fact, they're the violent explosions that will ever happen in the universe that is not true. and you know, in. absolutely. i mean, that's what i read this. i couldn't even read any further because somebody that because whenever somebody that they're or they're a physicist or an astrophysicist they're astrophysicist know they're a complete literally if complete she literally has if i know the astronomy was even know the in astronomy i was even the astrophage the smartest astrophage physicist is no smarter than the average person looking up at the sky metro and kevin spacey's life certainly a case of swings and roundabouts. so hopefully not literally but oh what's kevin spacey is picked up a achievement award italy days after appearing in court in london via video link . he denied london via video link. he denied fresh accusations sexual offences against against a belief which is ridiculous can't sexual assault on my you go full full barrymore but yeah he's he's 63 he's facing these new charges having denied five allegations did he ever get done officially i don't know what the
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what the end result was there was was stuff thrown at him from when he was time of the national said in the old vic wasn't it. but it's stuff historical offences come. i mean it's very difficult to whether you know these are these are allegations but we all understand that are some allegations should be taken more seriously than others. i know who's working at the old vic or the queen vic, wherever it's who's who? it's called. who's who? the queen . like in eastenders, queen vic. like in eastenders, kevin spacey , you know, made kevin spacey, you know, made a made then a for which term and to be just you know just yeah you know go go away everybody everybody knows that i first came to this country 20 years ago. yeah. the first time you walked past the old vic. they pointed to the park across the street. that's where kevin spacey is. go. that's free. yeah, yeah yeah, that's kevin spacey's power is it is kind of a shame because he was an amazing actor and he some great work at the old vic he was what i thought he was playing kevin spacey i think all these guys this was fantasy but he's a
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loser and he's teach me a lesson to everybody watching how to defend yourself. he kept quiet, he let the whole thing around coming out . he should have done coming out. he should have done a johnny depp thing, which is and just said, hey , is complete and just said, hey, is complete rubbish. i am . he did manage to rubbish. i am. he did manage to use the phrase now choose to live my life as a gay yes language which is now how he's a bit like gwyneth paltrow with conscious unconscious these guys thought was going to be thought that was going to be a trump well, guess trump. he's like, well, guess what, guys ? i think it's what what, guys? i think it's what i think, guys , naughty. so you can think, guys, naughty. so you can touch me will think i've been groping blokes actually. hey, i'm gay gay . this. oh well i'm gay gay. this. oh well that's for part two. part three, rather. that's part three in the back of whipping through it tonight. our last section coming up has tips for nuclear survival. who tells? yep that's right. and gb news get pranked. we'll see you in a couple minutes .
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and welcome back to is with me, simon evans , lewis and leo in simon evans, lewis and leo in the tepid seats lewis back to the tepid seats lewis back to the telegraph i have recommend patience for tv shows that send you to sleep as not high on the list i hope yeah well this is these are the big questions of our time. how do you fall asleep? what should you watch before you fall asleep? yeah so it's left after you've done study. say watch study. they say watch a suspenseful three thriller is better. just as good or better than watching something really boring, interesting, counterintuitive usually depends what you mean by like. like a private i kind of thing, rather than if the world going to end. yeah, well, these are things that you would know because you know everything and i don't anything i don't know. but it's on netflix to get away with
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murder have seen that haven't murder have seen that i haven't seen sounds it's seen it sounds like it's probably of like what they probably kind of like what they call police procedural. call a murder police procedural. one worst murders, all one of the worst murders, all quiet down because there's a lot of information. well, yeah, this is is to go is the obviously is going to go to all the shows to sleep because all the shows on are super, super on netflix are super, super boring. they go on for boring. and also they go on for ages that. you think ages like that. you i think making a murderer. you should, you on don't know you know, went on i don't know how hour long it how many episodes hour long it was following the court was going following the court trial. i like the actual trial would have been shorter the would have been shorter than the only watched. so only one i've watched. so i think called the jinx think it was called the jinx about developer like about a property developer like about a property developer like a in new york who a wealthy man in new york who killed his previous wives or something. it did. everyone, what that it was what did you see that it was only three they are only three parts but they are quite detailed you have focus quite detailed you have to focus you attention. i'll you have to pay attention. i'll tell a show genuinely tell you a show genuinely couldn't before that. couldn't watch before that. i watched game of thrones just because actual because blood and gore actual blood rather than blood and gore rather than suspense. oh, i hope they don't get. they have been. get. oh, no, they have been. i can't watch postman pat because it's seven in the it's on about seven in the morning. you could morning. yeah well you could probably you probably use youtube if you wanted that. yeah i do wanted to do that. yeah i do find actually sleeping now is pretty easy if i just read like
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about two paragraphs text about two paragraphs of text about two paragraphs of text about anything used about anything at all. it used to be down, but now any to have to be down, but now any kind processing of text i'm trying to remember because every single night i try to sleep and everything gets me upset, right? i mean , like there's not one i mean, like there's not one thing and i watch things that in theory, if i watch things about outer space physicists and it just i so angry at these physicists you get angry at astrophysics i get i scared this is the things i'm i mean game of thrones because there was literal blood. but i'm not scared of being beheaded. tell you what i did find. i couldn't sleep afterwards anthony hopkins film about film called the father about a man dementia absolutely man with dementia absolutely terrifying convinced terrifying because convinced i've all time i've got dementia all the time any time lose my face it here any time i lose my face it here it is it started male now useful tips on how to survive a nuclear nothing nothing remotely there but in all the fifties revival was hoping for a panel were closer to nuclear than ever before with with putin invading ukraine. all of us have been sabre rattling. he's been seen right from the start. i've got
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nuclear weapons in them and i'll definitely use them and. he says this every time. every time we cross another line, we provide more get involved more tanks. we get more involved in the war, he says. well, i'm definitely next definitely going to use next time, he hasn't so far. i'm time, but he hasn't so far. i'm not so worried anymore . i feel not so worried anymore. i feel confident flat the confident buying a flat in the centre of london on the 15th floor, out over where floor, looking out over where the going to go off. but the ball is going to go off. but the ball is going to go off. but the scientists have revealed the place is the safest places to take so the best thing take shelter. so the best thing to to beat inside a to do is to beat inside a concrete building. i mean, this is you know, the is going to, you know, the penod is going to, you know, the period not not you period dwelling not not you know, nothing. no, no, not more brittle no, nothing . brittle flint no, no, nothing. that no, this is this why nagasaki and hiroshima which are the places where nuclear weapons have been used against civilians. so yeah , this is part civilians. so yeah, this is part of the reason the damage bamboo was so hard was because you had timber buildings , so all timber buildings, so they all caught fire all those. do it all. yeah. no no protection. and then yeah. then, you know, you're wearing a kimono. it doesn't your toe at least we were coats here who's were duffle coats here who's going something
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going to provide something futons don't know what that but . the futons don't know what that but. the futons don't know what that but. the futon mattress when i was when i was a that because because i'm from era we used to do these drills don't do them anymore these kind of drills it was like these kind of drills it was like the covid of its day . yeah. i the covid of its day. yeah. i had duck and cover and we used to duck if they get down and your hands and knees and you used to stick your head , your used to stick your head, your legs kiss your butt goodbye legs and kiss your butt goodbye . yeah. basically because you're going to die . it doesn't matter going to die. it doesn't matter where you are. well, this is the thing. tell you how to survive a nuclear blast, not why that a fair question. is it? is it really going to be we're sticking around for apparently apparently civilisation recover within within a decade or two look japan they had the look look at japan they had the two you know pretty pretty large scale nuclear blast they're doing absolutely absolutely fine there are other countries i mean, haiti has an earthquake. and, you know, in 1964 and they've yet to recover from that. yeah there are it does depend a little bit. yeah, yeah,
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yeah. depend a little bit. yeah, yeah, yeah . but yeah. how anyway just yeah. but yeah. how anyway just case it lands tonight and the uk so be say the concrete building position yourself in the corner of the room facing the blast i assume this is assuming the concrete the stone face and the blast of you just how do you know where the blast is going to come from you get that from me weather report you can see it wherever your retinas are burned down, follow that direction. so avoid windows corridors and doors. hiding doors. there's not time hiding in of a corridor. in the corner of a corridor. it's than being in the it's safer than being in the middle. tables middle. it shelter under tables and chairs is. here is the lyrics to life during wartime by talking heads we have move on talking heads we have to move on wednesdays times and something tells this message find tells me that this message find a welcome in your spot and a warm welcome in your spot and yeah the most yeah well it's the most important of the day, important message of the day, which culture is a which is office culture is a health hazard. i the food regulator and that and is actually true because i actually know who work go and they go the office and they show me all the food that comes in and they've actually made complained about this friend of mine works for
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the buses and there is a kind of misery company isn't misery company vibe, isn't there? overeat cakes there? people who overeat cakes and love to bring them and doughnuts love to bring them in and share them around and turn what is essentially a pathology, some kind you pathology, some kind of, you know, character nuts, know, character quirk and nuts, no delicious. those no cakes. are delicious. those delicious and they you love delicious and they make you love the you gave them you the person you gave them to. you and people don't know what and you people don't know what can bring bring in and can you bring in. i bring in and i the salami to people. i bring the salami to people. biltong. yeah no one's interested in yourself. they are interested in yourself. they are interested beefy interested in chewy piece, beefy shoe string. and you can shoe leather string. and you can bnngin shoe leather string. and you can bring in somebody you could bnngin bring in somebody you could bring in a cbd product, cbd vaping yeah, yeah people vaping device. yeah, yeah people don't want but they want the real thing. yeah. my my kids when they were in school and they, they stopped it they, i think, they stopped it now until the age of about now but until the age of about 14 was, you know, if it was 14 it was, you know, if it was your you took a cake in your birthday you took a cake in and it around and it and you handed it around and it was considered to be meat and if you didn't but that caused a sugar crash and you might like so in middle of three so now in the middle of three and failure exams life and failure exams and your life spirals yeah in spirals into yeah it's in depression sugar but depression with the sugar but thing thing is this such thing the thing is this is such an english which is one is it's
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all about sugar and cake. i think, i think have more sugar per capita than any people in the you can look up the world. you can look that up in america. including in america. yes. including america more sugar. america they eat more sugar. they yes. my they put sugar. yes. no. oh, my mother certainly anyway, we mother certainly did. anyway, we have to move this have we have to move on this thing with nutrition. the i just made that up and that's has a possible new career avenue for lose explore go with lose to explore here leo go with it have an obvious louis is it you have an obvious louis is poo is perfect i know poo is perfect i would i do know this is channel 4 documentary this is a channel 4 documentary that explores swallowing people's in a bid people's perfect poos in a bid to actually help your health so other foods can contain other people's foods can contain you microbes biotics yeah you know microbes biotics yeah so that you know some don't have activia yes you get these and yet some people suffer from you know, antibiotics or whatever weight their gut flora so poos come in a little one of those little time capsules, presumably , but it's not, you know, spooning it out a bowl. you get it. you don't have yeah, you don't have to taste it. you don't have to taste it. you don't have to taste it. you don't have toss lewis's salad don't have to toss lewis's salad does bad as that. but just so does as bad as that. but just so it's a friend of the show, paul, and he was telling us that you
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get an osmosis poo particles going through through seats going up through through seats in transport right get so in public transport right get so you get it and can i just say this is one of those stories by our biome this whole story , our biome this whole story, complete b.s. the stomach, this. yes the stomach is a completely thing. you don't need . it thing. you don't need. it doesn't germs don't sit and just hang out there forever . it's hang out there forever. it's some people need more . the gut some people need more. the gut is a very clever thing. right. has the intelligence of a small dog. we know, but it's based. yes, it is. and it's attached the brain, the whole thing. the brain, vagus. but at the end of the day, is that is that your gut biome has everything to do with you eat at the present with what you eat at the present . know, i went into because . you know, i went into because you well known you know opposite a well known food store and they have the yellow thing and they yellow label thing and they allow us to experiment because we late at night, 830 we get in late at night, 830 last night bought and last night i bought chicken and kimchi wrap . i dismantled it and kimchi wrap. i dismantled it and threw away rat part because threw away the rat part because i that bitter bread i hate that that bitter bread stuff. the kimchi had stuff. but yeah, the kimchi had not kimchi like a very not eaten kimchi is like a very high amount. yeah. fermented. oh
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is amazing . and felt really is amazing. and i felt really good today. i think it might be the right. it might the kimchi right. it might be the kimchi right. it might be the this nothing do the kimchi this nothing to do with simon yeah, it with the story. simon yeah, it does started the, you does it started back in the, you know, it's better than know, insane. it's better than eating poo. you should not eat poo. i don't see him. massive you check out see, but i you can check out see, but i know what i'm talking about. finally, take moment to finally, let us take a moment to enjoy the independence, celebrating the humiliation of our doyle by our colleague andrew doyle by everton don't know if we everton fans. i don't know if we have clip, you can have this clip, but you can explain anyway. lewis this have this clip, but you can exlike1 anyway. lewis this have this clip, but you can exlike aanyway. lewis this have this clip, but you can exlike a project lewis this have this clip, but you can exlike a project story; this have this clip, but you can exlike a project story because is like a project story because . doyle so much . i . i love andrew doyle so much. i mean, he's given me a chance to be on tv. god bless the guy. but it a very funny. is that is it was a very funny. is that is that show that sometimes that the show that i sometimes have is free speech have on which is free speech nation. get around gets nation. yeah get around gets takes random questions from out in and someone in in the aether and someone in pretending to be bill bill kenwright who is the head of and deeply unpopular everton fans now extend that is the police have advised him not to attend his own matches because the security entirely of his. but he was beloved for many years that
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is his team doesn't he own the entire thing is how he goes but now they're saying he should sell because they're in the relegation zone and you know what the problem is it's what it is? the problem is it's like neighbour some like noisy neighbour some day that bigger than that they will be bigger than than so they in this than liverpool so they in this message and they the message and they bring the message and they bring the message that says i've been in charge my company almost 30 charge my company for almost 30 years, everyone me to years, almost everyone me to leave i and told them that leave and i and told them that they've had a good times with me and that i should stay on the job. should i do? and job. what should i do? and andrew didn't see this on andrew didn't didn't see this on this show i love the way you have to bear i think he's an man. that's it for this evening. thanks to my guest, leo kearse and louis schaefer, i'll be with headunes and louis schaefer, i'll be with headlines tomorrow at 11 again with leo once again and nick dixon . it's neck and neck with dixon. it's neck and neck with me and leo at the moment, remember the headline repeated, the one i am. if you're watching the one i am. if you're watching the 5 am, repeat, stay tuned for the breakfast show just after you've only after the break. if you've only been tonight, is now been watching tonight, it is now midnight. we're about midnight. coming up, we're about to ease into wednesday. i hope you've enjoyed our company
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tomorrow . i will see you back tomorrow. i will see you back here at 11 and then again at thursday morning. and so you see it just rolls on and anyway, that's tonight. thank that's all for us tonight. thank you much. good night.
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good evening. it's the first bold thing rishi sunak's done . bold thing rishi sunak's done. yes, he's going to veto nicola sturgeon's equalities legislation. we'll was he right to do so? came to get your views another horrendous case from the metropolitan police a serial rapist but hundreds more police officers under investigation. what is going wrong with our police forces? and joining me on talking points, well, he'll be familiar to you, of course, from a touch frost that he's appeared over the years , over the last over the years, over the last half a century in many of the greatest tv programme

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