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tv   Mark Dolan Tonight  GB News  January 20, 2023 8:00pm-11:00pm GMT

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welcome to mark dolan tonight. and it's a very special show this evening as we you a world exclusive . more on that in a exclusive. more on that in a moment. in just a few minutes, i'll take you through my of the week. highs and lows from over the last seven days, including including plenty of on air mistakes and hilarity. also this hounis mistakes and hilarity. also this hour, is britain back in business? we'll talk to entrepreneur, businessman and dragon's den star piers linney live in the studio and television broadcaster carol mcgivern to discuss why billionaire entrepreneurs echo ,
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billionaire entrepreneurs echo, activists, prime ministers, former ministers and others been gathering in davos for , the gathering in davos for, the world economic forum. what does it mean to you and me ? are we in it mean to you and me? are we in the throes of ? a depressing the throes of? a depressing global plus big sam on the show, former england manager giving his team talk to nation. we'll be discussing political leadership. yes, indeed . lots to leadership. yes, indeed. lots to get through that . also, after get through that. also, after 10:00, i'll speak to showbiz royalty katie price as she gives her first tv interview for two years. lots to get through. it is friday night. i want to stimulate, inform you and entertain along the way. lots to get through . and first, the get through. and first, the headunes get through. and first, the headlines with . tatiana sanchez headlines with. tatiana sanchez . mark thank you very much. this is the latest from the gb newsroom, the nhs will see the biggest strike action ever in the industry next month . the the industry next month. the unite union announced ten
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further days of industrial action by ambulance workers in the coming weeks they join 10,000 ambulance staff with the gmb union along with the royal college of nursing in joint action on the 6th of february, the workers across england, wales and northern ireland are walking out in a long running dispute over pay and staffing . dispute over pay and staffing. ukraine's volodymyr zelenskyy been holding talks with 50 western nations in germany today to garner further support in their against russia. kyiv requested 300 tanks. the us announced a further requested 300 tanks. the us announced a furthe r £2 billion announced a further £2 billion worth of support for ukraine, while uk says it will provide 14 challenger tanks . meanwhile, challenger tanks. meanwhile, germany have yet to make a decision on whether they will send tanks to the war torn country . and the head of nato's country. and the head of nato's military committee , admiral military committee, admiral robert says must make robert bower, says must make their own decision on giving tanks to . ukraine a new report tanks to. ukraine a new report into england's fire and rescue
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services says reforms are needed as a matter of urgency. the watchdog says just two of the six recommendations made by the chief inspectorate have been fulfilled . in an annual report, fulfilled. in an annual report, the chief inspector, andy cook, says frustrated at the lack of progress since inspections started in 2008. but the chief fire officer at leicester and rescue st said he's confident the is improving . the met police the is improving. the met police commissioner says mark rowley promised a thorough review of the force's culture and standards in an to root out corrupt officers such as former officer david carrick. mr. rowley said the next two years a critical to achieving our goals, including assurances as investing in diversity to become an anti—racist organisation. meanwhile, the national police chiefs council are police chiefs across england wales to have all officers checked against national databases by the end of
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march . while this all comes in march. while this all comes in the wake of the crimes committed by former police officer carrick, who to 49 criminal charges, including 24 counts of rape . the prime minister has rape. the prime minister has been given a fixed penalty nofice been given a fixed penalty notice by lancashire for failing to wear a seatbelt whilst in the back of a moving car. the prime minister was filming a social clip on his way to yesterday up announcement in the northwest . announcement in the northwest. he's already apologised with his spokesman, saying he made an error of judgement. in a statement the last hour or so, downing street says mr. sunak will comply with the fine . tv will comply with the fine. tv onune will comply with the fine. tv online and dab radio. this is gb news. now it's back to mark dolan tonight. welcome to mark dolan tonight. so much happening between now
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and 11. we kick off as always on and 11. we kick off as always on a friday with the now legendary clips of the week highlights from seven days on gb news the bad and the ugly. from seven days on gb news the bad and the ugly . also this bad and the ugly. also this hounis bad and the ugly. also this hour, is britain back in business? we'll talk to entrepreneur , businessman and entrepreneur, businessman and dragons den staff . here's lynnie dragons den staff. here's lynnie live in the studio, radio and television broadcaster carol mckeithen, who discuss billionaire entrepreneurs eco prime ministers and ex prime ministers have been gathering in davos for the world economic forum. what the hell is that? and why does it matter to you and me? plus, we'll have big sam allardyce as he gives his team talk to the nation. the former england manager will be telling us how he'd handled the public sector strikes. the nhs crisis and whether britain lacks leadership . often join. in my leadership. often join. in my big opinion, the bbc seems to have a problem with . older have a problem with. older presenters, even though it's older loyal viewers and, listeners who are keeping the organisation going in its
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obsession with youth , the bbc is obsession with youth, the bbc is discarding the talents of some of its greatest. i won't be pulling my punches . that's my pulling my punches. that's my very special monologue all about the bbc at nine in. the big question is home ownership a human rights? we'll speak to property expert and tv host martin roberts, as well as conservative mp james daley . martin roberts, as well as conservative mp james daley. i'm just off the 10:00. i'll speak to showbiz royalty katie price as she gives her first tv interview for two years. that's not meets just after ten. so it is friday night. it's freezing cold outside and you're stuck indoors. that so grab something cold and fizzy from the fridge or fire up the kettle and let's have a brilliant night. in what better way to start than my gb news eclipse of the week . it's news eclipse of the week. it's time for a look back . the highs time for a look back. the highs and lows of seven days on air at
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gb news. it's an item which makes presenters cry and usually needs to the resignation of at least one sound engineer. let's kick off with the brilliant michelle dewberry and one of our best contributors to the channel best contributors to the channel, the excellent ben habib giving a seductive give wink to the camera. oh my brexit party mep . and now the ceo of fast mep. and now the ceo of fast property group, ben habib . property group, ben habib. what's going with these? is it conjunctivitis ? okay, wait. conjunctivitis? okay, wait. don't make it nervous , tic. it's don't make it nervous, tic. it's take another look . what a babe . take another look. what a babe. i've got to say, we have plenty of on the channel, but this guy is in a league of his own. of on the channel, but this guy is in a league of his own . ben is in a league of his own. ben habib went to on his famous manners with some harsh words for his host and her employability. let's not forget, if you're a regular view, you will remember that ben habib is also the man that said he would
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never give me a job. i didn't say never . you could retake your say never. you could retake your . retake your gcse . that is . retake your gcse. that is definitely a mike drop from . ben definitely a mike drop from. ben habib and as harsh as it gets. but i've got to say, having been led by professors and so—called experts into economic disaster over last couple of years, my money is on michele's frankly refreshing brand of real world common sense. michele not for the first time in your career. i'm delighted to. you're hired . i'm delighted to. you're hired. now michele makes headlines every night from six till seven with compelling political debates and searing on apologetic commentary. but sometimes it's what she's wearing that gets people talking by the pound for every single one of you. that told me, i looked like colonel sanders from kfc. i'd absolutely minted minted . interesting stuff. now, minted. interesting stuff. now, for those listening on jeb news radio, we're showing a photo . radio, we're showing a photo. michele and colonel sanders, the
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famous founder of kfc. and yes, that's michele on the right . famous founder of kfc. and yes, that's michele on the right. i might lend her my fellowship. if it's might lend her my fellowship. if wsfime might lend her my fellowship. if it's time now for the weekly sitting on the fence award , as sitting on the fence award, as you know, the presenters at gb news, is it just so vanilla? what my friend and colleague nigel farage really think about a top scientist telling us we shouldn't bring cake to work. see if you can work out where he really stands this. i'm sick to death of these puritans wanting to literally control every aspect of our lives. please shut up. go away . do your job. we're up. go away. do yourjob. we're not interested . we find you very not interested. we find you very boring. and to . of you, if it is boring. and to. of you, if it is your birthday . don't work from your birthday. don't work from home. take some cake into the office. but what do you really think, nigel? course. nigel is right. and the man behind brexit, he's right to make the point that you can have cake and eat it . now, we've seen the good
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eat it. now, we've seen the good and the great of the global elite flying in their private jets to davos in switzerland , jets to davos in switzerland, wagging their fingers to the great unwashed like you and me, about change and the world economy . but there were one or economy. but there were one or two other surprise guests on that guest list , as revealed by that guest list, as revealed by our economics liam halligan on bev turner. excellent programme. but interesting representatives man united are at davos because they're looking for a buyer . no, they're looking for a buyer. no, absolutely . now, to paraphrase absolutely. now, to paraphrase the boss of world economic forum, klaus schwab , he's famous forum, klaus schwab, he's famous for saying, you will nothing and you will be happy. that's right. you own nothing and you will be happy. well, to paraphrase , is happy. well, to paraphrase, is that the glazer family normally say you will win and you will be happy. say you will win and you will be happy . come say you will win and you will be happy. come on, you reds. awkward moment of the week goes to our late night newspaper revue show headliners the
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excellent host, simon evans, casting a spotlight . comedian casting a spotlight. comedian nick dixon's love life lack thereof. extra rory. we have tuesdays telegraph. i feel almost cruel asking your response for this . know i was response for this. know i was going to say thanks for giving me this one. this is a reveal the true cost of being single. and finally a victim groups. it feels pretty good . well, blimey. feels pretty good. well, blimey. the cost of being single . but the cost of being single. but don't spend it on clothes or raises . they nick. now don't spend it on clothes or raises. they nick. now i happen to know that nick dixon is one of the most eligible bachelors in the country. one of the nation's finest satirists . a nation's finest satirists. a ready wit, great. plus, he's a bit of a gym bunny. ready wit, great. plus, he's a bit of a gym bunny . well. but bit of a gym bunny. well. but here is how you attract a lady . here is how you attract a lady. on the street ? that'll do it. on the street? that'll do it. back to nigel hall with some harsh words . the chancellor. harsh words. the chancellor. jeremy hunt . i harsh words. the chancellor. jeremy hunt. i did harsh words. the chancellor. jeremy hunt . i did say harsh words. the chancellor. jeremy hunt. i did say hunt. oh
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dean jeremy hunt. i did say hunt. oh dear, oh, dear, oh, dear. why do try to pretend they're normal human things? they're not. they're a bunch of oxbridge weirdos , in my opinion. mary was weirdos, in my opinion. mary was the entirety of the inflation problem another did you make of . they've put something nigel's tea this week. he's right of course. what a banker. now it's over to fabulous presenter politico.com and twitter and cleric calvin robinson with some strong words for the church of england. from my view, it seems the upper echelons of the church of england are overseeing a managed decline and their priority is to leave behind a perfectly embalmed liberal corpse . blimey, calvin , a very corpse. blimey, calvin, a very fair point, but i've got say, based on that audition, i don't think his dream of becoming the next presenter of jack connery will happen any time soon. daddy, i'm scared of the presenter . let's take another presenter. let's take another listen . perfectly embalmed ,
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listen. perfectly embalmed, liberal corpse . corpse blimey, liberal corpse. corpse blimey, you're scaring the kids. but we all know who the next presenter of and will be . of and will be. works every time. now, prince harry has dominated the headunesin harry has dominated the headlines in the last few weeks, culminating in a lively debate on my show on sunday. i asked my panellists why prince had allowed his family to be attacked in this way . peter attacked in this way. peter lloyd thinks he's got the answer. he let it happen. sometimes people got good , you sometimes people got good, you know, got some goodies . can i be know, got some goodies. can i be frank, please ? you know, it is frank, please? you know, it is hypnotised by vagina . hypnotised hypnotised by vagina. hypnotised by vagina priming. back in my day, paul mckenna did the job. and last but not least, veteran commentator andrew pierce was getting information on an
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important issue that affects all of us brits . don't want to screw of us brits. don't want to screw up you walk, so obviously clean it with , like, you know, a green it with, like, you know, a green shower, which is absolutely fine. and then what you do, you put back heat and you put it back on the heat and you make that all the water has make sure that all the water has evaporated . blimey, this is evaporated. blimey, this is taking a while i think i'll just follow nails . now taking a while i think i'll just follow nails. now i do taking a while i think i'll just follow nails . now i do know some follow nails. now i do know some people that put a very, very thin layer of oil just to keep it. but if it's you shouldn't need to do that . need to do that. i don't. what you're trying to do with a good carbon steel work is build a patina, which that natural non—stick every time you use the wok and, the darker that goes, the more non—stick and the more flavour. is over. yet
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blimey, those are your of the week and there's really only way to sign off this item . to sign off this item. well, blow me. those were the clips of the week. in the next seven days, if you see something noteworthy on the channel drop me an email market gb news .uk and title the clips of the week and title the clips of the week and your clip may well feature on a future pro grab. lots to get through in the next 3 hours. katie price telling her story, her first tv interview for quite some time, two years. in fact, she's here with us after ten in my 9:00 monologue, why has ken left the bbc i've got strong words for aunty . how could they words for aunty. how could they be asleep at the wheel . that one be asleep at the wheel. that one he's got the biggest radio show
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in the country and they let him go. meanwhile, they gary lineker almost 2 million quid for match of the day . the world's gone of the day. the world's gone mad. we'll get to that shortly. but next up with surprising news on the economy, is britain bouncing back? we'll ask a dragon from dragon's den .
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katie price's first live television interview for two years. that's at 10:00. and a mark meets . welcome back to the mark meets. welcome back to the show. now all the prophets of doom being proved wrong. i've long been a proponent of a positive outlook when it comes to this country, notwithstanding the rigours of the brexit transition , the pandemic and the transition, the pandemic and the war in ukraine. it's my view that the fundamentals of the british economy are strong , british economy are strong, which appear now to be borne out by recent data . so with the
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by recent data. so with the economy having unexpectedly grown in november and with bond purchases having actually delivered a surprise profit, and with unemployment and inflation set to halve , is the british set to halve, is the british economy bouncing back? let's speak to a dragon den style dragon's den star , of course, dragon's den star, of course, and the bbc founder of no blogs, and the bbc founder of no blogs, a highly successful small business service . i'm delighted business service. i'm delighted to welcome lenny hype hippias. am i was going to do a wink, but i'm also appropriate for this as this section . well, it would be this section. well, it would be very welcome, but no one is as sexy as ben habib as well know. lovely have you on the show tonight ? look, that was good tonight? look, that was good news . i'm aware that we're not news. i'm aware that we're not suddenly booming , but it was suddenly booming, but it was good news that we didn't see a in the economy in november of last year . yeah, i'm convinced .
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last year. yeah, i'm convinced. think you had there was a bit of a low because of the queen's funeral . there's a a low because of the queen's funeral. there's a bit of a bounce because of christmas the world cup for. well bounce because of christmas the world cup for . well the bounce because of christmas the world cup for. well the figures are now showing the christmas there wasn't quite the bounce people were looking forward expected. so we might see a lot of companies that were depending on christmas to hit their selves . two goals for the year struggling, coming into the new yeah struggling, coming into the new year. so think that we need to buckle up quickly to the prime minister. i we all need to sort of think about being very cautious about going this year. you seen the you know, you've seen the footsie , know, quite footsie, you know, not quite there. sure . maybe, there. i'm not sure. maybe, maybe could hit maybe tomorrow. it could hit a high. i mean, the 40 to 50 is more relevant and that's that's pretty as well. i think pretty high as well. i think that's giving us to that's really giving us to a picture of the economy. if you think, you know, printing money, inflation, interest rates are going up, the cost of debt going to maybe people borrow to afford christmas. they've got to be that load at some point . i'm not that load at some point. i'm not convinced about how we even measure cpi and inflation itself, but including the rising
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cost of in the last change took out suits and put in vegan sausages. so it's arbitrary terms how they measure this . so terms how they measure this. so i think he'd be very careful. i think we're in for either looking going to recession this year or bouncing around it so clearly in a buckle up. is your advice . however the bigger advice. however the bigger picture is looking a little rosier isn't it. with inflation set to come down the global cost of energy is dipping well as countries seek an alternative to putin's oil and. and of course unemployed but still reassuringly low to . so in time reassuringly low to. so in time . we will recover, won't we? yeah.i . we will recover, won't we? yeah. i mean, these thing, the cyclical say so it's going to be a difficult of time and then you come out it. and the key is to, you know, be there and to survive and then thrive. and it does mean individual businesses. i'm very focussed on small businesses, but i mean the economy as a whole. you're economy as a whole. so you're right , the british economy, right, the british economy, britain is in a very strong
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position . so, you know, i think position. so, you know, i think there's a pm saying that we should be the best place to start and operate the business. i completely in that . i completely believe in that. but i you've got to be but i think you've got to be cautious about, you know, going running hard inflation running at it hard inflation hopefully we'll get down to about 4% like the forecast this rising interest rate . a few rising interest rate. a few tools we've got to actually make that happen. so i think you will see that happen and things are getting better. if you're a consumer , you're going to see consumer, you're going to see the energy price come down. if you're a small business, they've changed. quite as changed. the cap is not quite as well. it's more of a disconnect. so quite helpful as it was. so quite as helpful as it was. so quite as helpful as it was. so are a cliff edges for so are a few cliff edges for small businesses . don't forget small businesses. don't forget this five and a half million of them million people. this five and a half million of thethat million people. this five and a half million of thethat flow million people. this five and a half million of thethat flow see million people. this five and a half million of thethat flow see economy. zople. this five and a half million of thethat flow see economy. sole. so that flow see economy. so i agree with . there's light at the agree with. there's light at the end of the tunnel but i think the end of the tunnels a little bit further away we expect bit further away than we expect . heanng bit further away than we expect . hearing that, piers , are .we're hearing that, piers, are many tory backbenchers are pressurising the prime minister into cutting taxes . the fact
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into cutting taxes. the fact that with that surprise news of growth , albeit pretty modest in growth, albeit pretty modest in november of last year , that he's november of last year, that he's got enough money with which to cut taxes and stimulate growth. what's your view? should the chancellor and the prime minister cut taxes to make the country grow again . half a bit country grow again. half a bit complicated. clearly say, i think , it's a bit early. i mean think, it's a bit early. i mean a lot of it in that ideological isn't about cutting taxes. so i'm a big believer in the you know, taxes should be a minimum, especially if you're looking at, you know, growth above the bottom line. what is most a flow to the bottom line that can be invested, invested in businesses? it's too businesses? i think it's too early saw think about, early marks we saw think about, you cutting taxes. let's you know, cutting taxes. let's see how the economy pans out. let's see where we end up with the various disputes about pay, how might flow through to how that might flow through to inflation, because that have how that might flow through to in marked because that have how that might flow through to inmarked impact; that have how that might flow through to in marked impact where have how that might flow through to inmarked impact where is have how that might flow through to inmarked impact where is going a marked impact where is going to go. so i think it's how we how are we going to deal with the debt burden that we've sort of accumulated through covid,
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the impacts of brexit as well as still is when we've got quite got the bottom of that. so got to the bottom of that. so it's start making it's too early to start making these know these changes. we saw, you know , truss try and the we , the liz truss try and the we saw the markets reacted to that . so we should careful more . so we should be careful more of course your success for entrepreneur you employ plenty of talented people. do you think that unemployment will stay low because that's normally what happens when there's a recession you get high unemployment that's been the only of the economic outlook over the last 12 months. what we're seeing kind of turn around. you saw the great resignation, but now more vacancies and a lot of people looking for work. so i quite fully understand how that actually competes. a lot of employers are struggling, hiring people that needs to be able to employ, you know, from europe . employ, you know, from europe. these cities, you still do it. okay, that's fair , let's face okay, that's fair, let's face it. but it's more complicated in the world. there's more paperwork. so think that we are in good place. the in a good place. the unemployment, economy's unemployment, but the economy's changing. you know, we can't we
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can't assume the will tomorrow is going to be looking like it was over the, you even was over the, you know, even decade. the world changing very, very you see new very quickly. you see new technologies are they've had a play technologies are they've had a play t was that today play with a t i was that today these technologies going to change the need for lots of not just manual labour but also sort of you know the labour this brain labour many people are working in not just it's not just taxi drivers , truck just taxi drivers, truck drivers, administrators, it's lawyers, accountants, it's surgeons . so technology is going surgeons. so technology is going to change the world very quickly and a lot of fast. and we expect and a lot of fast. and we expect and happening now , piers are and happening now, piers are thrilled to have you on the show . come back and see us soon. piers, lenny, who's a top entrepreneur, he is, of course, the star of dragon's den and the founder of no blocks, which is a highly successful small business provider . lots to get through highly successful small business provider. lots to get through in cluding later in the show. this
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. on mark dolan tonight. in a world exclusive, katie price joins live to talk fame, love , joins live to talk fame, love, plastic surgery and her hopes for the future . you in dangerous for the future. you in dangerous fake gp news . for the future. you in dangerous fake gp news. i'm meeting up with my old mate dolan. it's been ages . i've done an been ages. i've done an interview with him . that's katie interview with him. that's katie price on on .
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gb news. welcome back . now gb news. welcome back. now billionaire entrepreneur's eco prime ministers, former prime ministers, former prime ministers, the good and the great of the global elite have descended once again in the small swiss town of davos . paul small swiss town of davos. paul them for the annual meeting of
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them for the annual meeting of the world economic forum , an the world economic forum, an international non—governmental organisation . but what is the organisation. but what is the end game here ? why does it end game here? why does it matter to you and me ? is the matter to you and me? is the plan to boost the world economy improve quality of life and save the planet ? or does this the planet? or does this gathering represent the multimillionaire corporate, political and media elites who are increasingly deciding the future on our behalf? are we sleepwalking into a global government or do these people know better than us? with their private jets ? let let's speak to private jets? let let's speak to one of the best known faces on terrestrial tv writer and relatively loose woman, carol in. hi, carol. relative loose woman. yes i will never let you forget . the fact that in my forget. the fact that in my fledgling broadcasting career , i fledgling broadcasting career, i was a sort of lowly assistant producer on a fabulous breakfast show. right that you presented with richard skinner . show. right that you presented with richard skinner. he's brilliant. oh, i knew what you .
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brilliant. oh, i knew what you. you were so nice to me. i mean, you've changed. you've become a monster because now you've got money. oh, i wish , but. but, money. oh, i wish, but. but, yeah, so i've you so long and actually very interesting to talk to you about this gathering in davos because , you know, in davos because, you know, you've always been a very compelling commentator on all issues. and i think it's because you say as you say, it's . and you say as you say, it's. and we'll get to covid in a moment. and your position on the covid measures . and your position on the covid measures. but are there parallels with what's happening in davos this week, the idea that something doesn't seem right. god. something doesn't seem right. for three years now. i think it is , yeah. the whole i think it is, yeah. the whole thing. you know, when you , when thing. you know, when you, when you think about the wef and what it is and it's so unbelievable how many people don't know about the wef and never of the wef and you can kind of say, oh, maybe is a force for the good , for is a force for the good, for good, the global good for the
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benefit of the people because they talk poverty, they talk about the planet climate change, but it isn't. it absolutely is not. i think it's sinister. but it isn't. it absolutely is not. i think it's sinister . and, not. i think it's sinister. and, you know, it sounds a bit james bond, but it is. it is run or it was started out klaus schwab who weirdly isn't at this meeting this time . in fact, there are this time. in fact, there are three very obvious missing people there. biden bill gates and klaus schwab. klaus schwab lives in switzerland. so, you know, i don't really know why the wef is his organisation is he started it, he created it . he started it, he created it. he's he's he's the head of it is the face of it in fact you know and he's the guy likes dressing up he's he's got no shame he's he's a very weird character and everything that they do or they want to do they tell you they're doing it but people don't believe it because it's so, so extolled mary. well that's right. they the language of the
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great reset is something that is associated with so—called conspiracy theorists . of course, conspiracy theorists. of course, you will know nothing. and will be happy this hasn't come lonely teenagers in their grandmother's bedroom on a laptop . these are bedroom on a laptop. these are direct quotes from the world forum. absolutely. and the weird thing is, you can feel already happening. it is happening . happening. it is happening. people aren't owning anything . people aren't owning anything. they're being told eventually they won't be able to own a car. you won't be to afford to drive a car. you won't you won't know. they're doing the 15 minute city thing, which, you know, lot of thing, which, you know, a lot of people have heard of. people have never heard of. again, like , you know, again, it's like, you know, let's sure everybody let's make sure that everybody only 5 minutes from everything because don't want people because they don't want people mingling. now, what's changed from years previously ? it was from years previously? it was always about great reset. that's how they would talk about it openly. this time there's no real mention of the great reset. it's talking about. it's all about net zero and climate change. everything is the
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climate . this is this is words climate. this is this is words that the language that they use and you've got people they're like, well boris, i just noticed today al gore and al gore's , today al gore and al gore's, they're the one who had the very profitable film and made a hell of a lot of money off the back of a lot of money off the back of scaring people to death. and then inconvenient truth. yeah, that's right. yeah put it into schools. it was shown in schools compulsorily . and changed. it's compulsorily. and changed. it's changed from that to that. and then you've got greta thunberg . then you've got greta thunberg. they're walking around the streets . these are the people streets. these are the people that are causing the climate . so that are causing the climate. so it's almost as though you know she's kind part of that , but she's kind of part of that, but she's kind of part of that, but she's kind of going against it. it's almost like the climate won't stick to the narrative. no the narrative seems to be and it's self and everybody's , it's self and everybody's, everybody else. and then you've got tony blair there. now anything says to people this a very dangerous and strange organisation. then you just have to know that tony blair is there
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telling everybody about digital ideas. telling everybody about digital ideas . and getting third, which ideas. and getting third, which he's been trying to do since he was in power a long, long time. yeah and saying we need and actually looks quite unhinged. i don't you've seen the don't know if you've seen the videos there . he looks videos of him there. he looks quite sort of nervous and kind of worried he's not going to get away with it this . well, blair away with it this. well, blair is in point . yeah. yes. is a case in point. yeah. yes. he's the next prime minister he's the next prime minister he's behaving like he's still in power . and that's what bothers power. and that's what bothers me gathering in davos, is me about gathering in davos, is it's the elite. it's not actual elected representatives. it's just powerful people. and i find that insidious . supposedly, that insidious. supposedly, there changing the world for all for all in our best outwith our in terms of what that means. reality such as? i don't know, will we be given a carbon footprint that once you've taken one flight a year, that's you . one flight a year, that's you. oh, god, that's got to stay home. there there's another thing happening . you thing that's happening. you know, you nothing . we know, you learn nothing. we won't be happy. but the
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footprint thing is all part . footprint thing is all part. think of that digital i.d. thing . you've got you've got to be able to have something to keep that digital i.d. able to have something to keep that digital id. and social credit and everything else that the way they can complete completely control you and tony blair's talking again about the vaccines . multiple shots . we vaccines. multiple shots. we have to know who's vaccinated we have to know who's vaccinated we have to know who's vaccinated we have to know who isn't , why ? no, have to know who isn't, why? no, you don't need to know that . and you don't need to know that. and they talk about pandemics like they're planning another one. and it's if you listen, if you between the lines and listen to what they're saying , you it's what they're saying, you it's very, very, very scary think it's really scary. and i think if more people attention to it, more people would have woken up properly to what happened in the first pandemic because . it was first pandemic because. it was exaggerated we know that now we know that a lot of the information that's coming out now has proved the conspiracy. i mean, some the fake reports from
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from china or do you think it was a slant ? from china or do you think it was a slant? media from china or do you think it was a slant ? media coverage of was a slant? media coverage of the pandemic early doors? well, yeah, i do i do think it was the msm being controlled by the government because a lot of nhs highly respected nhs people are coming out now and saying that they were told to put down deaths as covid deaths. now if you know how many people actually died only of covid under 65. so without any co—morbidities just from covid. it's around about 2000 and people i've been saying this like since start that these figures have been available to everybody and an nhs website on a spreadsheet . and i've been a spreadsheet. and i've been saying telling people this from the start and they just go, oh no, no, no, at least. we no, no, no, at least. well we had that debate didn't we, about, know , dying from war, about, you know, dying from war, covid. exactly. and you know, look, the figures been, you know, bandied about left, right and centre . there is a flip side
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and centre. there is a flip side to the argument which is you could argue that everything that's being discussed at davos is importance to all of is a matter importance to all of us. so if it's the point to make, aren't they within their rights to say , what do we do if rights to say, what do we do if there's another pandemic ? people there's another pandemic? people did die of covid maybe that could be prevented . they got could be prevented. they got their ducks in a row. could be prevented. they got their ducks in a row . what's the their ducks in a row. what's the problem with a digital id ? problem with a digital id? perhaps will with perhaps it will help with illegal immigration . and if illegal immigration. and if you haven't the law, have you haven't broken the law, have you got and also got anything to hide? and also the majority of climate scientists say that really scientists would say that really the planet is heating up. we've got get emissions down. got to get those emissions down. and everything that's being and the everything that's being discussed davos aimed at discussed at davos is aimed at that end. so basically everything they're trying to do is good , but that's how they is good, but that's how they sell it to , isn't it? they sell sell it to, isn't it? they sell it to every one because they tell you going to be good for you. it's going to make your life easier. going to make life easier. it's going to make you to improve . but you it's going to improve. but it absolutely not. the ditch slide thing is a very it's a very chinese idea. and they are
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already using it in china now where have to earn credit points in order to just live their lives, to get into their homes and things like that . so, no, it and things like that. so, no, it isn't it isn't okay for them to talk about that in the way that it's going to benefit all of us because almost none of it will. the climate thing, the pandemic, they had pandemic prepare readiness plans already. in place before the last one, and they ditched it all. and turned turned everybody into prisoners . ironically, sweden kept the british exam today for their preparedness plan , which they preparedness plan, which they stuck to. yeah. i mean, you don't think because because we, you know, we've we've agreed on so much in the last few the course you know, that mainstream science , you know, the science, you know, the government are very, very clear that the is 100% sort of, you know , safe and effective and know, safe and effective and that lockdowns needed to happen otherwise would have been lost . otherwise would have been lost. but you can't know that, though, mark. they can't know that. can
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they. how many lives have been lost because they locked down, you know, the mental health problems that people have now they the children that have been damaged by by being shot in their homes and not being able to go to court loads . there are to go to court loads. there are so many things that lockdowns cause people are still scared. people are still acting as though there's some kind of deadly virus and they talked about that virus as it was the deadliest thing in the world and it absolutely was no , never was. it absolutely was no, never was. it was removed from the list of highly high consequence infectious on in march in 2020 just after it was discovered or it became a thing so people still started you know walking around and keeping their distance and putting the masks on.and distance and putting the masks on. and only when they stood , on. and only when they stood, they put the mask on or did sit down. i mean, it was all nonsense and when people look back at it. now, this this is why they're really to get away with another one. now they keep talking tried it with
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with another one. now they keep talkmonkey tried it with with another one. now they keep talkmonkey pox, tried it with with another one. now they keep talkmonkey pox, didn'ti it with with another one. now they keep talkmonkey pox, didn't reallyh the monkey pox, didn't really work. they tried with the other one. bb1 .85 or whatever it was that didn't . because i think that didn't. because i think people really woken up and seen how ridiculous it was. a lot of people won't admit it. they won't admit that they fell for it, but well, you know, i mean, i maybe, you know, calling it all nonsense be a bit strong because, you know, people did die. with covid die. people got ill with covid hospitalised even the prime minister so you know it wasn't a fake thing was it. and i'm not saying it wasn't a thing i've never said it but also you can't imagine that they're planning another pandemic. i mean they're planning for another pandemic. no, don't think they're no, i don't think they're preparing for no do you preparing for one. no do you think they're planning one. yes oh, god, i do. yeah mean to me it is. you know, that's really obvious . i it is. you know, that's really obvious. i haven't it is. you know, that's really obvious . i haven't got the obvious. i haven't got the evidence. it'sjust obvious. i haven't got the evidence. it's just what they talk about, it's the way they say it. they say for next pandemic, they never used to say that the last pandemic we had was in 1918. you know, that's
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that's like but they're not talking about globalised. the world is. and get on aeroplanes so if somebody catches something it spread its way they it will spread its way they wouldn't have had denmark in the last years international last hundred years international travel. no it doesn't really . travel. no it doesn't really. people have been travelling for years . they want you stop years. they want you to stop with the carbon footprint thing of them your carbon of them measuring your carbon everywhere you everything . everywhere you go, everything. do your lectures do your gas bill, your lectures bill has got a carbon monitor on it. this is why they need the digital id so that they can locate all into that and then switch off whenever they feel like it . well, listen, i'll like it. well, listen, i'll never switch you off . brilliant never switch you off. brilliant debate. fascinating stuff. and carol, you have been a principled voice for three years. you've taken it. all right. you take it, you're probably lost a few friends. yeah yeah, yeah, love, actually. yeah, yeah , yeah. but they they yeah, yeah, yeah. but they they weren't your friends in the place because, you know. well i just feel. i feel sorry for people who? who don't like me because i saw what happening and i still see what's happening and
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they they can't handle the truth. i think those guys will look they're thrilled . have you look they're thrilled. have you on the program come back soon, please . well, will in some we'll please. well, will in some we'll agree with carol. we'll get for every others will disagree so is your view mark at gb news dot uk are we sleepwalking into a global government off the back of a week of finger wagging from davos lots to through. next we'll talk about leadership in the country with big sam c shortly. plus the way i should mention this , we've got reality mention this, we've got reality star total icon of showbiz katie price tells her story ten you won't want to miss it.
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welcome in approximately two years time, britain will be faced with a choice. rishi sunak or sir starmer as our pm. but with the economy in freefall,
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with the economy in freefall, with the economy in freefall, with the nhs on its knees and with the nhs on its knees and with britain slipping the global pecking order , do we deserve pecking order, do we deserve better leadership ? it is a better leadership? it is a changing of the guard number 10. really just the changing of deckchairs on titanic. let's speak to a man knows all about leadership. big sam is one of the most respected figures . the most respected figures. football. he's had plenty of top jobs at england and west ham example. but in his career , he's example. but in his career, he's also often inherited weak squads of players at clubs under pressure, facing relegation and or stuck in the championship , or stuck in the championship, and yet has still brought them great success, often taking them up.and great success, often taking them up. and of course, famously them up. and of course, famously them up. how does he do it? and what can our politicians learn from big sam? it's time for big sam's team talk. and he joins us now . team talk. and he joins us now. evening, gaffer . good evening team talk. and he joins us now. evening, gaffer. good evening . evening, gaffer. good evening. unfortunately, i cannot see you on my screen. so that's very unfortunate. but obviously , from unfortunate. but obviously, from the plain and clear. unfortunate. but obviously, from the plain and clear . well, the plain and clear. well, listen, sam i think you've
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dodged a bullet because i'm wearing a very annoying yellow tie tonight . i'm sorry. let's tie tonight. i'm sorry. let's talk about political leadership . how important is it that britain has great management from the top . i think that's the from the top. i think that's the top priority , to be honest with top priority, to be honest with you. i think that i think leadership, unfortunately, can taughtin leadership, unfortunately, can taught in oxford , cambridge or taught in oxford, cambridge or eton , where it seems most of the eton, where it seems most of the conservative mps come from. it comes through your understand of people, your understanding of the job that you do , what the job that you do, what position you're in, and if you're in a leadership position , how do you improve that position and that would improve the workload with the who work with the and they don't work for you they actually work with you. and i think you to do the most difficult thing of all and that's getting respect and respect is much much harder to gain than than than being being
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liked. gain than than than being being uked.so gain than than than being being liked. so across the board , liked. so across the board, across you go over many years and looking at what you do with with with football players , you with with football players, you have to be a leader to lead them into success and. we deal with people that sell a product. obviously most people in the industry deal with an product and forget about people. i think so understanding the people that you work with and getting the best out of them is imperative to your leadership and your choices of your leaders . ship choices of your leaders. ship groups that sit on the beach here, then have opportunity and the power and of course the to will and be successful in their own right is what you want. you want somebody to be with you who's actually better than you at certain things that you're not as good at. and if you can find that combination , then you find that combination, then you have the perfect balance of being able to just sit down and challenge each other and make
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the right decisions going forward. and then obviously we would pass over to the team , would pass over to the team, pass over to the players and, constantly review and hopefully bnng constantly review and hopefully bring success, which is obviously lot more difficult in the in government of course. but certainly it's something that should be looked at in terms of who way choosing why are you choose you name easy the best person for the job who is the best person for the job. can we find him? can get him what is sorry i mean , you know, sam, sorry i mean, you know, sam, i don't to drag you into policy . sorry i mean, you know, sam, i don't to drag you into policy. i know that you're someone that rather unite than divide, but we could speak generally about the character and values of rishi sunak, the prime minister. he's clearly got family values. he's clearly got family values. he's clearly got family values. he's clearly got a work ethic . but clearly got a work ethic. but then again, he's married to a billion s. so what does he know about the real and about hard working brits struggling with the cost living crisis? so what am i on? keir starmer again? a
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bright and accomplished . he's bright and accomplished. he's also clearly clearly you know, inexperienced public at minister as a former lawyer but i mean do you rate either of them as leadership . at all in all leadership. at all in all honesty they don't they don't inspire me the don't get me on the edge of my seat and think that i would like to vote for you. i'd like you to take the country and obviously i'm voted conservative for the time and with boris and course i made the mistake the entire fortune for labouri mistake the entire fortune for labour i thought he could be economic. that's right time to leader that particular time. oh, the best one in the pack, if you like but no neither the leaders in labour conservative actually actually inspire that they're actually inspire that they're actually going to do what they say and stick to that and
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inspire the country to come out of this, this deep depression that we're in at the moment. and i know it's not all their fault . i know it's a world a world problem at the moment. but they certainly could . the tories at certainly could. the tories at the moment could do better with that. they the backbiting and the infighting we've experienced just recently would we be better in the hands of boris, big sam ? in the hands of boris, big sam? no no, no. i think that is at this time . a very, very this time. a very, very difficult time. may i add ? i difficult time. may i add? i mean, who would have expected that when you when you running the country, prime minister, you would have to face an unknown. and certainly the covid was an unknown at that particular time. and obviously lots of lots of things were were handled extremely badly. but there was obviously one good thing in his favour that we did find a vaccine , and that vaccine is vaccine, and that vaccine is proven to work , which is very, proven to work, which is very, very important . what are your
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very important. what are your thoughts about the strikes, sam? i think we can agree that there are many in the public sector who merit a pay rise. but, you know , running a tight budget as know, running a tight budget as a top manager at some brilliant clubs that were frankly pretty broke . can britain afford these broke. can britain afford these these pay rises, especially inflation raging as it is . well, inflation raging as it is. well, if we think if we take the most important now and the most important now and the most important one is that the government's putting people's lives at stake by not settling the nurses or ambulance service know. and they have to face the fact that if you look at the background of it and, obviously i am not i am not overwhelmed with stats and facts . i do know with stats and facts. i do know when i speak to them that they all it's been over the years is the beds , staff, the vehicles , the beds, staff, the vehicles, the beds, staff, the vehicles, the ambulances can't the nurses and if you want to fill 130,000
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jobs doing what you're doing , jobs doing what you're doing, the moment is not going to encourage anybody whatsoever to come and join the nhs. encourage anybody whatsoever to come and join the nhs . so come and join the nhs. so they've got to think of a way to sort out certainly the nhs and all this from there on and get them back working and then got to think of the plan. i know they're going to send these hundred and 30,000 jobs because at the moment they're never going to do it by that going to do it by the that they're acting. so they deserve more money. they've been underpaid for me, many, many underpaid for me, for many, many , they , particularly the job that they they've put their lives on at risk all over the pandemic. many people have died of their dedication . the nhs and it's no dedication. the nhs and it's no they're looking back now and saying, you know, we're all trapped for you. where's the reward ? and i think that's what reward? and i think that's what we've got to do now. and the only way we can reward them is financially because they are struggling desperately . i mean, struggling desperately. i mean, nurses going to food banks, come on can't be right. big sam . i've
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on can't be right. big sam. i've only got a couple of seconds left. is there any chance that the conservatives could retain vote at the next election ? no vote at the next election? no okay. there you go . a straight okay. there you go. a straight answer to a straight question gaffer. i look forward to another sam team. talk very, very soon. always a privilege to have you on the program . one of have you on the program. one of the most respected and successful managers of his generation , big sam allardyce . generation, big sam allardyce. all the big names at sport speak to mark dolan tonight. speak to gb news. speaking of big names katie, price is my mart meets guest live at 10:00. she'll talk fame. she'll talk family values . she'll talk about her career. plus surgery and much, much more . we've also got some of your favourite from mark dolan tonight including the papers at exactly 1030 sharp and next in big opinion, i'll be dealing with the bbc. why have they let the radio to star ken bruce leave? he's got the biggest show on british radio . is it because
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on british radio. is it because he's old? we'll discuss ageism at. the bbc .
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next on mark dolan tonight. in my big opinion monologue , bbc seems to opinion monologue, bbc seems to have a problem with older presenters, even though it's older, loyal viewers than , older, loyal viewers than, listeners that are keeping the organisation going are the ones who love people like ken bruce. why has ken bruce left radio two? i'll be commenting on that very shortly. my mark means guest just after ten is showbiz royalty. katie price live on the programme giving her first television interview for two years. we've got some absolute truth bombs coming let me tell you it's a big question . is home
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you it's a big question. is home ownership a human rights be? joined by property expert tv presenter martin roberts and conservative mp with strong views on the housing market, james daly in the news agenda mp lee anderson right . brits on lee anderson right. brits on a lower income should budget better or is that an insult also 7 better or is that an insult also ? could you survive on just two alcoholic drinks a and after an internet on the topic, how often should you wash your clothes lots to get through after headunes lots to get through after headlines with the always clean tatiana sanchez . mark, thank you tatiana sanchez. mark, thank you very much. this is the latest from the gb newsroom. the nhs will see the biggest strike action ever in the industry next month as the unite union announced ten further days of industrial action by ambulance workers in the weeks to come, they 10,000 ambulance staff with
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they 10,000 ambulance staff with the gm union along with the royal of nursing in joint action . the 6th of february, the workers across england, wales and northern ireland are walking out in a long running dispute over pay and staffing . ukraine's over pay and staffing. ukraine's vladimir has been holding talks with 50 western nations and germany today to garner further support in their fight against russia . kyiv have requested 300 russia. kyiv have requested 300 tanks. the us announced a further tanks. the us announced a furthe r £2 billion worth of further £2 billion worth of support for ukraine, while the uk says it will provide british challenger. meanwhile, germany yet to make a decision on whether . they will send tanks to whether. they will send tanks to the war torn country and the head of nato's military committee, admiral robert bower, says countries must make their own decision on giving tanks to ukraine. a new into england's fire and rescue says reforms are needed as a matter of urgency the watchdog. says just two of the watchdog. says just two of
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the six recommendations made by the six recommendations made by the chief inspectorate have been fulfilled . in an annual report, fulfilled. in an annual report, the chief , andy cook, says he's the chief, andy cook, says he's at the lack of progress made since inspections began in 2008. but the chief fire officer at leicester fire and rescue callum faint , said leicester fire and rescue callum faint, said he's confident leicester fire and rescue callum faint , said he's confident the faint, said he's confident the force is improving . the met force is improving. the met police commissioner mark rowley has promised a thorough review of the force's culture and standards in an effort to root out corrupt officers such as former officer david carrick . former officer david carrick. mr. rowley said the next two years are critical. achieving our goals, including assurances such as investing in diverse city to become an anti organisation. meanwhile the national police chiefs council urging police chiefs across england wales to have all officers checked against national databases the end of march. it comes the wake of the crimes committed by. former police officer carrick , who police officer carrick, who admitted to 49 criminal charges,
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including 24 counts of rape . the including 24 counts of rape. the prime minister has been given a fixed penalty notice by lancashire police for failing to wear a seatbelt whilst in the back of a moving car. the prime minister was filming a social media clip on his way to yesterday's levelling up announcement in the north—west. he's already apologised with his spokesman saying he made an error of judgement . in error of judgement. in a statement, downing street says sunak will comply with the fine. that could be up sunak will comply with the fine. that could be u p £500 . and news that could be up £500. and news just in to us in the last few minutes. and chris hipkins is set become the new leader of the labour and the next prime minister new zealand. mr. hipkins , jacinda ardern, who hipkins, jacinda ardern, who just yesterday, after five and a half years of political leadership , he's expected to be leadership, he's expected to be confirmed as the new leader on sunday sunday. tv online and the abc radio with gb news with back to mark dolan tonight.
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my to mark dolan tonight. my thanks to tatyana sanchez, who returns in an hour's time . who returns in an hour's time. welcome to mark dolan tonight. my welcome to mark dolan tonight. my big opinion in just a moment . the bbc seems to have a problem . older presenters, even problem. older presenters, even though older loyal viewers and listeners are the ones keeping the organised action going. i'll be commenting on the departure of ken bruce from radio two and i won't be pulling my punches. that's coming up shortly . the that's coming up shortly. the big question. as a of brits are set to be locked out of the housing market, we is home ownership a human rights. we'll be joined by expert and tv presenter martin roberts as well as conservative mp james daley, who has strong views on the housing markets. my mar meets guest is show biz royalty katie price . she gives her first tv price. she gives her first tv interview for two years. that's
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at ten. at 1030, as always, we'll have a at tomorrow morning's papers with a full panel reaction in the news agendais panel reaction in the news agenda is lee anderson right that brits on a lower income budget better? also based upon new medical could you survive on just two alcohol drinks a week. good luck with that . and after good luck with that. and after an internet storm on the topic, how often should you your clothes? we'll discuss that and lots of other burning of the day with my all star panel of journalist and bestselling author freeman. broadcaster presenter and the best looking on gb news aidan magee i know when beat and model health guru and tv personality best talking of how often should you wash your clothes, let me tell you that all three of them are dry cleaned . now i want to hear from cleaned. now i want to hear from you throughout the show. market. gbnews.uk and this show has a golden rule . one we don't break.
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golden rule. one we don't break. what is that rule? we don't do? boring. not on my watch . i just boring. not on my watch. i just won't have it. so for the next hours, big debates, big guests , hours, big debates, big guests, and always big opinions and tonight, katie price live at ten. but first, let's start with this . beyond ten. but first, let's start with this. beyond our ken. bbc radio legend ken bruce has been poached by commercial after four decades as the king of meet mornings on radio two. now the bbc are keen to stress that he was offered a new contract . was offered a new contract. bruce himself has said that he's ready for a new challenge . but ready for a new challenge. but there's more to this than meets there's more to this than meets the eye or meets ear. after all, it's the radio . you're welcome. it's the radio. you're welcome. because two has seen a massive of its premium older talents. steve master of often noon radio
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sacked . not the right decision . sacked. not the right decision. the vanessa feltz , released from the vanessa feltz, released from the morning show was her crime . the morning show was her crime. being over 60. well she said almost as much this week when speaking to itv . broadcasting speaking to itv. broadcasting legend . mayo first forced into legend. mayo first forced into an excruciating drivetime partnership with the hip young jo whiley before leaving not just radio to where he's been for years, but leaving bbc altogether . for years, but leaving bbc altogether. he's been for decades. altogether. he's been for decades . this to be altogether. he's been for decades. this to be a altogether. he's been for decades . this to be a cultural decades. this to be a cultural issue across the whole organisation . is it ageism? you organisation. is it ageism? you tell me. miriam o'reilly, one of the former hosts of the tv countryfile, won a claim of age discriminate against the beeb. she lost her job in 2008 when countryfile was moved to a prime time slot. the bbc replaced her
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with younger presenters in her witness . ms. o'reilly said i witness. ms. o'reilly said i felt as if my life had been cancelled because of something i had no control over. getting older , we're told arlene , older, we're told arlene, phillips was taken off strictly being too old, replaced by a more youthful alesha dixon . now more youthful alesha dixon. now i'm in broadcasting. i understand it's a competitive business. if you don't do the numbers, you're out. and i'm pleased to say thanks to you . pleased to say thanks to you. i'm normally beating . sky about i'm normally beating. sky about now and the mark dolan tonight show is the home of viral videos where my monologues interviews have so far clocked up over 4 million online views since the start of the year. million online views since the start of the year . well, ken, start of the year. well, ken, bruce simon mayo, steve wright, vanessa feltz , all of these vanessa feltz, all of these legends were delivering the numbers to ken bruce. this show
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is , the most listened to radio is, the most listened to radio programme in the country. so is the bbc letting him go? well, in my view, it's the obsession with chasing young listeners and viewers that frankly , they'll viewers that frankly, they'll never get. because people don't watch telly in the way that we used to. they don't listen to radio in the same . they've got radio in the same. they've got streaming they've got youtube. they download . it's all they download. it's all fragmented . and the listeners fragmented. and the listeners and viewers that actually keep the bbc going are the older listeners and viewers who love the likes of ken bruce so much . the likes of ken bruce so much. it's older people who willingly pay it's older people who willingly pay the licence fee , but who are pay the licence fee, but who are not being served by the organisation itself . now let me organisation itself. now let me say that the bbc obviously want to give opportunities to younger talents and they would argue that new are going down a treat the audience including at radio 02 and they have a whole raft of o2 and they have a whole raft of television and programmes
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dedicated to an older audience and plenty of old talent as well . but who in their right mind would let ken bruce go? and whilst told that the talented zoe ball on the radio two breakfast show enjoys a salary of just under £1,000,000. that's right, a million quid. it's reported that bruce with the biggest show on. the network is on 400,000. that's a million versus 400,000. great money. but barely enough to pay for gary cufflinks on match of the day. and with eight and a half million listeners week to his radio show, bruce is the jewel in the crown 400 grand he should gets a million because he is one in a million. now, bruce is a proud man , and he's discreet. he proud man, and he's discreet. he will get a bumper pay rise at greatest hits radio , and he will greatest hits radio, and he will take listeners off auntie, big time . so it could well be that
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time. so it could well be that ken bruce is seeking a bit of a payday ken bruce is seeking a bit of a payday before hanging up his micro phone, feather the nest and that. but he should be getting that as an organisation where he's already over delivering at the tender age 71. he's at the height of his powers . he's got the biggest radio in the country. he could do another decade , not more. the seems to decade, not more. the seems to have a problem with presenters foolishly . the audience don't foolishly. the audience don't want to hear them or see them. well, here at gb news take a different view where some the greatest and most established and experienced broadcasting talents have a welcome platform . we've got alistair stewart , an . we've got alistair stewart, an evergreen news genius , the evergreen news genius, the fabulous and veteran of breakfast television . speaking breakfast television. speaking of which , tv icon eamonn holmes of which, tv icon eamonn holmes angela rippon, one of my childhood broadcasting heroes on
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this network. the list goes on. and i make every effort on this show to be as diverse as possible, including in relation to age. so, for example, we have the likes of diddy david hamilton, who an unmissable fixture on mark dolan tonight. he's better than ever. at fixture on mark dolan tonight. he's better than ever . at 84 he's better than ever. at 84 years young . all of these over years young. all of these over sixties are far from over the hill . they are, as i've said at hill. they are, as i've said at the height of their powers. they're not oldies. they are goldie's . and for radio two to goldie's. and for radio two to let bruce scale hosted the biggest radio show in the country, they not be serious . country, they not be serious. now, what's your view? do you agree? do you disagree? mark at gbnews.uk? let me know . gbnews.uk? let me know. thoughts. i'll get to your emails shortly . reacting to that emails shortly. reacting to that and the big stories of the day, my all star panel journalist . my all star panel journalist. best selling author hilary
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freeman. broadcaster. journalist. and the best looking on aidan magee and model on gb news aidan magee and model health guru tv personality angie best. angie i want to ask you about this . i'm having trouble about this. i'm having trouble ageing the because you all look like teenagers to me. can we talk about the departure of ken bruce? i wouldn't normally focus on a rival broadcaster , but i on a rival broadcaster, but i think this is an important moment in the national conversation . was is that guided conversation. was is that guided to me? yeah. angie, what is your view? i think that it's a mistake letting go of big important. i was asleep . mistake letting go of big important. i was asleep. i'm 78. you know, it's late at night for me . if bruce was here, he'd me. if bruce was here, he'd asked the question properly . 70 asked the question properly. 70 is the new 50. that's what i say. i must tell you quickly , i say. i must tell you quickly, i did a really very, very, very good pilot for the bbc arthritis. right and the person
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who came from the bbc came back and said, oh, we don't want it. we don't want anything to do with old people really . so this with old people really. so this was a producer at the bbc who did want to feature an issue that affected older people which is arthritis . that affected older people which is arthritis. he figured arthritis was just for old people, which it's not. but i mean, could this be could this be just a random individual that does not the whole organisation. i don't know. that was my experience with them. they didn't want anything that represented old people . what do represented old people. what do you think? i mean, how do you feel that the media treats older people angry ? i think the media people angry? i think the media treat us och . i think it's treat us och. i think it's there's few who are up there in their suits with their big bellies and very talk sick who don't know better . and it's don't know better. and it's a because the you get the more
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experience you have the more you know the more you've seen , the know the more you've seen, the better you are at understanding everything. so the more knowledge you have to give and the more insights you have . the more insights you have. situations so, you know, it's a mistake in my mind. i agree. i mean, look, this is my attitude . feel 18 is that the beeb look at someone like ken bruce , they at someone like ken bruce, they just think, oh, he's over the hill. when we going to get rid of this old codger , accept the of this old codger, accept the inconvenient that he's the inconvenient truth that he's the host. and i can't say this too often. he's the host of the most listened to radio programme in the united and he's the united kingdom, and he's left . how so? yeah, indeed. left. how so? yeah, indeed. i mean i know a little bit about this because it's about four years ago my previous employer i actually wrote a 12 13,000 word thesis about their editorial direction and part of it was that i felt that they were discarding before discarding older talent before their time and even commercially i felt it was a really ruinous route to go down by almost chasing an audience that isn't this. they're trying to be down
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with kids wasn't with the kids and it wasn't really working because in reality just middle reality this was just middle aged blokes trying to aged white blokes trying to produce content audience produce content for an audience that never with the channel. that had never with the channel. they that by having big they felt that by having big numbers on youtube or elsewhere on media, they felt that by bringing these on to our channel, would bring their channel, they would bring their their audience with them . never their audience with them. never been it doesn't been the case. it doesn't translate like that. sometimes they're offering is they're content offering is successful of the medium successful because of the medium it's on because it's on the social addition social media. in addition to that, also say that gb that, i would also say that gb news i would say, performs a more sort of traditional output, if you like if that's the right way to put it. and then we discovered certainly in the early our output about early months of our output about now reason think now i'm no reason to think it would actually would change, but we're actually engaging people engaging with younger people more thought we more than we ever thought we were. so i think were. yeah so i think commercially and there's this precedent well. precedent for this as well. i mean, this mean, newspapers tried this years when the years ago. i remember when the daily mid 2000, daily express back the mid 2000, the employed the early 2000, they employed rosie boycott to try and engage with audience . and with the younger audience. and so pictures of so suddenly you got pictures of and the front and and dolphins on the front and environmental to try engage environmental to try and engage with a different kind of
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audience while alienates the traditional army sergeant from wells. now people don't divorce their newspaper or their tv viewing habits years. i think about it for quite a long time. i mean, my father, when i was a kid, he always took the sunday express and got fed up with express and just got fed up with it after a while and eventually went sunday. you went to the mail on sunday. you know once you lose know what, mark? once you lose those, those viewers, those the audience, those, those listeners, don't back. listeners, they don't come back. this choice . boots and this is not a choice. boots and superdrug or tesco and asda, this something much this is something much more serious and that more serious and that much more fundamental. they fundamental. and once they they're other thing they're gone. the other thing i would that it's would say that the old it's commercial it's commercial again, it's a foolhardy down because foolhardy to go down because commercially older people tend to more money, oh, we have to have more money, oh, we have an ageing population , but we'll an ageing population, but we'll probably this young probably never be this young again. as well again. you may as well consolidate you've got consolidate what you've got rather to chase rather than trying to chase an audience which you probably never you never get engage with you to write . hilary do write. hilary freedman do you think bbc is institutionally think the bbc is institutionally a just? well, i don't think it's institutionally i just i that it's trying to move with the times and it doesn't as aidan says it's lost direction . it
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says it's lost direction. it doesn't know how to capture that younger audience. it's the same with newspapers you know, i remember when i started off in newspapers and i remember thinking, oh my god, when i get to 40, that's, you know, i'm over the hill, there'll be nothing. newspapers, one inches, magazines interested in over 40. and that has all changed. newspapers have realised that they've got to keep that older audience and move and keep them and move them because and move with them because trying younger trying to get the younger audience working. i the audience isn't working. i the bbc needs to do the same. it needs value older reader needs to value its older reader , its older viewers, its older listeners and try other ways to get younger people. absolutely right. more on this to come . right. more on this to come. mark meets guest at ten is katie price in her first television interview in two years. but next interview in two years. but next in the big is home ownership a human right see you shortly .
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well the big reaction to my big
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opinion monologue with the departure ken bruce from radio two is the bbc ages. now, let me stress, they've not fired him. he was offered a new contract but he was on 400 grand for the biggest radio show in the country. his rival on the breakfast show , a million quid breakfast show, a million quid a year. breakfast show, a million quid a year . is that breakfast show, a million quid a year. is that unfair? let's look at your reaction . how about this at your reaction. how about this from making hi mark. it seems the bbc hates every ist and some other than ageism. oh lately biological females. other than ageism. oh lately biological females . well, less biological females. well, less says i'm mark the bbc deliberately trying to turn radio into radio one. just look at the line of the replacement presenters that they've brought in over recent years to replace the well—established, much loved older . they risk losing all of older. they risk losing all of their older listeners and the younger will not bother to tune in to radio two. thank you for that one less nicola. hi mark the presenters chiefly have no dynamic do not flirt some no
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subtle sexy appeal. it's perfectly bland mostly peculiar women . they seem to remove women. they seem to remove anything truly human in a recognisable form. they are formless . they've done this to formless. they've done this to try to appeal to everyone and end up appealing to no one. well, nicola, thank you for that. i do hope i've got a bit of sex appeal. i won't hold . my of sex appeal. i won't hold. my breath. and how about this from juuan breath. and how about this from julian says the crazy are just proving by their actions it's not fit for purpose for the modern era. it's about time the licence fee is abolished and the bbc enters the real world of commercial television in my opinion, it wouldn't last 5 minutes, then and good riddance. however, steve says mark, i love the bbc worth every penny and there are plenty of older presenters, including one of the biggest legends , attenborough biggest legends, attenborough and last but not least for now , and last but not least for now, grant says, hi, mark, great show. the bbc are getting rid of old people because they're not agreeing with or influenced by their woke ideology. grant you for that keep those emails
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coming. mark gbnews.uk it's time now for the big question , in now for the big question, in which we tackle a major news story of the day. tonight the mail report that a generation of brits will be locked out of the housing forever. with new figures revealing how some first time buyers would need to save up for 15 years just to get on the housing ladder. that's 15 years for a deposit. by which time, of course, house prices will have increased further , will have increased further, meaning the dream of homeownership is beyond the reach of . many. but does it reach of. many. but does it matter? should we follow the european roots of a rental market or ? is home ownership market or? is home ownership a human right? to debate this , i'm human right? to debate this, i'm delighted to welcome conservative mp for berry north james daly. hi, james, and i'll kick . i'm very james daly. hi, james, and i'll kick. i'm very well. happy friday. thanks very much for giving up a chunk of your to discuss this . it's a big term discuss this. it's a big term isn't it a human right and clearly you know accommodation a
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roof over your head , food on roof over your head, food on your plate that is a human right but do you think it's an important right you know you could get on the housing ladder as a brit. well, it's important, right. but i think you put your finger at mark about is this a legal right that you're talking about? right enforceable about? is it a right enforceable through ? we can't have through the court? we can't have a situation where home ownership is a leak, is a right this legally enforceable. what happens when don't happens when people don't pay the don't the bill, the mortgage or don't the bill, is state going to that is the state going to pay that forever? terms of and we forever? so in terms of and we see anyway this with rent controls state of housing controls or state of housing costs it just simply doesn't work . one of my concerns in work. one of my concerns in respect to is really serious issue regarding the delivery of a housing stock that people of all ages can buy. but it does come down to this thing about the state doesn't have the answer to everything. our is to provide houses within the local area where people live that are affordable and a framework down to let me be blunt about it at most time because down to you
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useless local councils who not deliver a vision for their area you know it's so easy. you know, i am a conservative mp so i would say this, but blame the government for literally everything. for everything. the government for years and, years years have years and, years and years have been housing assessment, been using housing assessment, need and have need figures and have deliberately how can it deliberately how can put it created the base on 2014 population projections which are not accurate and the reasons why they did that was because they wanted authorities to wanted local authorities to build as many houses as they possibly local authority will not do it . you know i mean the not do it. you know i mean the other thing to say is in the north of england, i'm an mp, i'm throughout the country, you know, towns, brownfield sites, loan to places to build houses. you know that local authorities have the you know, the planning function, why get do function, why they get on do it. but too blame the but it's too easy to blame the government. know, i think government. you know, i think there's argument that there's a bigger argument that go and keep billions go and keep giving out billions pounds regarding brownfield regeneration nothing ever regeneration and nothing ever happens.i regeneration and nothing ever happens. i could go mark, but you seem to really. however, james wood, the local authorities not argues that they
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need money to build houses and that that's where the budget is so lacking and that is the fault of central government, the local authorities in general can't be bothered. so they planning you know, that that sort of planning function to , you know, major function to, you know, major housing developers, major housing developers, major housing developers, major housing developers want to build as we can quite understand, the commercial world, three, four, five bedroom house an five bedroom house is an absolute premium. we've seen, you government policy you know, government policy which got very well which has got very well intentioned with help to buy, but create that created inflation in the housing market, that pushed the cost of up. and so , you know, local authorities so, you know, local authorities can work with almost can work with housing associations. they can work with private sector to deliver truly affordable housing. i mean , in my area, we housing. i mean, in my area, we need affordable housing for young housing for older young we need housing for older people to downsize we don't outside local authority and bury don't have an answer to that and i'm not kidding hate to have a go at them but it's so, so easy to blame governments of anything
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, you know, we need to get away from politics just simply from politics of just simply saying to blame rather at saying they to blame rather at a local level taking responsible city you know and i still think at home we can talk i understand the point you make and it's a really really important point about saving about 15 years. but we need to encourage within people that is a great thing to own to house, money, on own a to house, money, to get on the housing market, earliest opportunity good to opportunity to have a good to have a well—paid employment, opportunity to have a good to have a well—paid employment , to have a well—paid employment, to be live in the area be able to live in the area where anyone's where you live is anyone's question . we got to away question. we got to get away from simply just saying that everything including housing is soon how a right that the government will pay for you. it isn't is time for people to be responsible. do the right thing. save up the money, work hard as they there's still the they can, and there's still the housing options. even in housing options. even now in a lot of parts of the country. no at and not in at no, no in london and not in various parts country, but in a lot of the country, you lot of parts the country, you can house, you know can still get a house, you know , a first time buyer , i think , as a first time buyer, i think the broaderjames , as a first time buyer, i think the broader james that , as a first time buyer, i think the broaderjames that i'd have is that if a generation of people feel that they can't on
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the housing ladder, there's no hope of getting on the housing ladden hope of getting on the housing ladder, even if they do quite well. let's imagine , you know, well. let's imagine, you know, it's a sort of joint household 0 f £60,000. you've got of £60,000. you've got a schoolteacher and, you know, a nurse who cohabit and even they in a city like london , in a city like london, manchester or glasgow can't get on the housing ladder. there is a danger that this generation will disengage age with the economy altogether because they don't have a stake in it and possibly give up the idea of market capitalism altogether which could in a corbyn type figure in the future . well figure in the future. well i think that think you put your finger on a very point in modern politics i'm touched the earlier one of the worrying things for me in general about now is it literally is about how much money you can give to . you know, money you can give to. you know, it if a conservative it seems if a conservative politician aims to save and invest 10 billion in year invest 10 billion in this year the cycle and say 12 billion, we have direction as to this the cycle and say 12 billion, we have diisction as to this the cycle and say 12 billion, we have diis going s to this the cycle and say 12 billion, we have diis going too this the cycle and say 12 billion, we have diis going too invested
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money is going to be invested for common good respect of for the common good respect of this. mark it is not genius. we are proper people . we have are proper people. we have people right talent to people with the right talent to local authorities working with the . i could name 25 the private. i could name 25 companies now that could and work with every local authority in country to deliver in the country to deliver housing need . the housing that we need. the problem just building problem is that just building houses as we have shown the last few years, doesn't mean that affordable. does it mean these the of housing we need? you the type of housing we need? you know, after in central know, i look after in central london, you quite rightly london, as you quite rightly say, public workers can't say, public sector workers can't afford live there. my seat in afford to live there. my seat in bury i have a huge work out rate people working in central manchester because they can't afford that building a afford to live that building a lot properties . but it's all lot of properties. but it's all hugely expensive is not family owned it's catering for people's needs. owned it's catering for people's needs . so you know, it's the needs. so you know, it's the frustration of the small people saying we've got to do something . nobody ever has an answer, but we just need people in place at a local level or regional level who deliver because he who want to deliver because he can it in very mean you have can do it in very mean you have to go out and bury one day i
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don't tell you all that can don't tell you all that i can show you now, but we could build, know, ten, 5000 build, you know, ten, 5000 houses. the hope you in terms of how we regenerate housing you know the high street in many, many places we've got to get housing in. they've got to keep people closer to urban people closer to these urban centres. but we don't do it because people are because either people are incompetent or can't be bothered or in the interests of or it's in the interests of developers, you know , who don't or it's in the interests of develto ers, you know , who don't or it's in the interests of develto waste u know , who don't or it's in the interests of develto waste timeyw , who don't or it's in the interests of develto waste time spendingion't want to waste time spending a lot money on on, you know , lot of money on on, you know, sort regenerating brownfield sort of regenerating brownfield site to nice field in the site. go to a nice field in the green stake five bedroom house on a charge of million quid and they're happy . and that's why they're happy. and that's why our planning policy has been for years years and years and years and years and local councillors with local councillors get away with murder. this all political persuasions. they persuasions. it's time they actually stood up and delivered for areas how times do you for areas how many times do you a councillor say to you this is what i want local area to what i want my local area to look . want houses for look. i want these houses for affordable. you don't do it. it's to blame people. i mean, you know , and that's the way it you know, and that's the way it goes. you won't quite right you know, and that's the way it goterms you won't quite right you know, and that's the way it goterms of)u won't quite right you know, and that's the way it goterms of where 't quite right you know, and that's the way it goterms of where we're:e right you know, and that's the way it goterms of where we're we ght you know, and that's the way it goterms of where we're we need in terms of where we're we need to need to ensure that
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to do we need to ensure that people feel they've got a stake and the way that is that they have a wide range of housing stock in all parts country a debate that will continue james a very delightful honour to have you on the show. james daly is a conservative for bury north. thank you, james. we'll catch again soon. your reaction, mark? we've been asking you in a gb news poll is ownership a human right ? 55% said no, but a large right? 55% said no, but a large number, 45% said yes. it is. coming up, my mark meets guest is katie price . she's live at is katie price. she's live at ten. it's her first tv interview in two years. but next as a pair , adoptive parents return , their , adoptive parents return, their autistic child should before life see shortly .
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i'll get to your emails shortly but in the news agenda reacting to the big stories of the day my panel , journalist and best panel, journalist and best selling author hilary, we've to broadcast a journalist and expert on all matters aidan magee model, health guru and tv personality angie best . now a personality angie best. now a video has resurfaced . a youtube video has resurfaced. a youtube star discussing her and her partner's decision to give up their adopt child. the were unable to cope with the special needs of their son and rehomed him after three years. this raises many questions on the complicated ethics surrounding adoption, but one simple question resonates among all others . should adoption be for others. should adoption be for life? let's discuss this , the life? let's discuss this, the panel life? let's discuss this, the panel. hilary, you a best selling author. you're also an agony aunt, a bit of an expert on affairs of the human soul. what's your view about this situation? i'm kind of torn about this . of me thinks, you
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about this. of me thinks, you know, my gut reaction is this is disgusting that they could , you disgusting that they could, you know, give up this child who's already rejected once, presumably it's not being rejected again . but the other rejected again. but the other part of me thinks actually, if this child is now going to go to a home where they can look after him properly, where he's going to get the care and attention he needs love that needs and the love that he needs, better needs and the love that he needs, in better needs and the love that he needs, in the better needs and the love that he needs, in the long better needs and the love that he needs, in the long runyetter needs and the love that he needs, in the long run than for him in the long run than somebody keeping looking somebody keeping a child looking after and not being able after a child and not being able to cope with and resenting to cope with it. and resenting it and, you know, it and hazier and, you know, that's why that's why you get situations of abuse. so you know i don't think they should have been able to adopt in the first place. and i certainly think this problem with this is part of the problem with the whole of social media, the whole kind of social media, youtube of people youtube generation of people who almost , let's adopt a almost think, let's adopt a child because we need content. and that people and that's something that people will like look nice in will like and it look nice in the pictures. well yeah i mean i actually full disclosure i only had for you know i did it had kids for you know i did it it was for twitter really especially this second one. but but you do wonder, don't you,
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because people might not realise how many hoops you to jump through to adopt in the first place. well, the big focus of all of those meetings and the endless questions form filling is to guarantee that you will commit to this child . sure. commit to this child. sure. that's what they want to know. sure and i know people who've tried to adopt in this country, and incredibly difficult . and it's incredibly difficult. some haven't been able some of them haven't been able to, have fantastic to, and they have been fantastic parents. yeah. you parents. yeah. whereas, you know, go out to know, you can, you can go out to the and have the pub get pregnant and have a baby , you know, nobody take you baby, you know, nobody take you know, nobody looks into that do they mess? you have do start they mess? you have to do start doing bad. so but doing anything wrong bad. so but yeah but i children have to yeah but i children you have to you have to just accept children aren't going to necessarily be what expect them to be. they're not to be perfect little, you know, packages that will do and say what you want are their own people and they may have issues , may have problems. and even if they're perfectly healthy, they could run over by a or could be run over by a bus or something. know, we never something. you know, we never know what's going happen. know what's going to happen. and love should unconditional for children. not a flat screen
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children. it's not a flat screen telly that can back to telly that you can send back to john lewis. no, no. i mean, what do you think this age and do you think about this age and it's story. it's obviously a tough story. and that they return and i'm sure that they return this a heavy heart but this child a heavy heart but just the expression returned . just the expression returned. this doesn't right, this child doesn't sit right, does ? it paints child as does it? it paints the child as a commodity. now, the principal of abandonment is not alien to us. my parents, for example , us. my parents, for example, care homes. so people learn difficulties in both the public and private sector. central london and kent . we had a case london and kent. we had a case where one of our residents was he was part of a family of i think it was three children. mum and dad , they emigrated to and dad, they emigrated to america in 1970 and just left the young oh, the second oldest son here because they realised the provision wasn't going to be quite the same in america as it is over here . in other words, is over here. in other words, it's going to lot more it's going to be a lot more costly. so they him in costly. so they left him in the care parents. my parents care of my parents. my parents looked between 1970 looked after him between 1970 and these and 2001. i believe these deceased now. but younger deceased now. but his younger brother , to be fair to him, brother, to be fair to him, actually found parents back in the late nineties and said, look, we understand, understand, i've we've never
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i've got a brother. we've never really been spoken about, but can me more about him? can you tell me more about him? this guy become a high flyer , a this guy become a high flyer, a major multinational company and is england do is coming back to england to do some paired some. and eventually we paired them together and the them up together and got the relationship . the point is relationship going. the point is that that abandonment, relationship going. the point is that that abandonment , the that that abandonment, the principle is not a new thing. it's for youtube it's just for the youtube generation . this was going on in generation. this was going on in the seventies. just the early seventies. we just didn't about it as much. yeah. what i mean, would didn't about it as much. yeah. th’look i mean, would didn't about it as much. yeah. th’look at i mean, would didn't about it as much. yeah. th’look at a i mean, would didn't about it as much. yeah. th’look at a change an, would didn't about it as much. yeah. th’look at a change in, would didn't about it as much. yeah. th’look at a change in the uld you look at a change in the rules that he was adopted in china , right? of course. you got china, right? of course. you got to look at a change of rules. and are young, older and these are young, older generation. wouldn't have given back. generation. wouldn't have given back . they'd have kept and back. they'd have kept and they'd have stuck to and they'd have done the due diligence . have done the due diligence. they would done their work. they would have done their work. yeah sickness and, in health. yeah in sickness and, in health. it's a bit like marriage isn't it. yeah kids don't come it. yeah these kids don't come with wheels , do they. with training wheels, do they. i mean, pay extra for that. mean, you pay extra for that. it's diabolical that i couldn't . i agree with what you sweetpea, when you said that it's better that she goes to a boy or a girl or this was a boy,
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goes to a home that can look after him , take care of him, and after him, take care of him, and deals with better. they could have , but they obviously young have, but they obviously young couldn't be bothered , didn't couldn't be bothered, didn't make the right picture . blah, make the right picture. blah, blah, blah. it's saddest thing the fact that even talking about this is really said. it is i mean, does it reflect a change in society's values of almost a kind of consumer culture . and kind of consumer culture. and that's exactly what it does it's a big reflection of a horrible society that we are creating now . mhm. what about parents who adopt babies and as the child grows and develops they discover a variety of physical or mental issues which are related . the issues which are related. the pregnancy outwith of their knowledge . so it's very common knowledge. so it's very common now for mothers to be alcoholics or drug . i've got a very good or drug. i've got a very good you know about this california she adopted three boys knowing that they were all had alcohol
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holic or drug addict. the parents had gotten rid of them. they were throwing them out the street. she adopted three of them all of them grew up with problems . them all of them grew up with problems. she them all of them grew up with problems . she saw it through them all of them grew up with problems. she saw it through and that now one's in a band. the other one's they're all very successful , profitable children successful, profitable children , grown up into fabulous kids. so if you commit, you commit. it's any child . any child you it's any child. any child you have, you to have you commit to it. and it's as simple as really in my mind . yeah, it is look in my mind. yeah, it is look it's a very, very sad particular story. we don't have all the details, but it raises a question about nature of our society. look, we've got lots to get through . don't forget, at get through. don't forget, at 10:00, the reality herself she'll be talking about fame, about money, about plastic surgery, and about her hopes for , the future. katie price and notorious figure. she's never
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bonng. notorious figure. she's never boring . she's an old friend of boring. she's an old friend of mine. we worked together in the day and she'll be telling her story at ten. have you got questions for katie . drop me a questions for katie. drop me a line now. market gb news at .uk . so your emails that next market gbnews.uk but next up is mp lee anderson write that brits on a lower income should budget better. we'll be joined politics legend and voice of common sense winner . see you .
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in two. well, a big reaction to our discussion in the big question is home ownership. a human rights? this from alison. hi, mark. the conservative government to tell the country what they're paying to local authorities to build homes. if they don't disclose that sort of information. the conservatives
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will be blamed all the time . will be blamed all the time. also big reaction to my big opinion monologue, which karl has now crafted into a clip twitter at gb news. if you to catch it back. gary says hi mark. the bbc have completely the plot. i only listened to radio two for ken bruce and pop master and then switched to greatest hits radio . so that greatest hits radio. so that will save me having to re tune. great show is gary. thank you for that. keep those emails coming in quick extra line on housing from eve housing a human rights especially the dream homeownership eve says hi mark. mainly people who already have other properties can afford to buy my son and his partner hoping to start a family were fortunate enough to find compassionate vendors who sold to them as first time buyers rather than the cash purchasers who also wanted the property . who also wanted the property. see, perhaps there should be a
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limit to say three properties that can be owned by one person or couple. eve thank you very much for that. keep those emails coming. market gbnews.uk . now coming. market gbnews.uk. now the conservative mp anderson has come under fire this week after using a female aide's salary on twitter to prove his claims that people on low incomes only use foodbanks because they can't. budgets his tweet reads katie works for me. she single earns less than 30 k, rents . a for less than 30 k, rents. a for £775 per calendar month in central london. has student . central london. has student. £120 a month on travelling to work saves every month goes on foreign holidays and does not need to use a food bank. katie makes my point really well . so makes my point really well. so is it lee anderson right that brits on a lower income should budget ? and let's speak now to budget? and let's speak now to former conservative cabinet
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bestselling author and, radio and television presenter edwina currie. hi, edwina . hi, mark. hi currie. hi, edwina. hi, mark. hi edwina. i think it's time for a dollop of edwina. common sense and calling a spade a spade. do you think that those on a lower should budget better , or is this should budget better, or is this a way of helping the government escape blame ? well i think lee escape blame? well i think lee anderson definitely has got a point, but everybody . everyone point, but everybody. everyone should budget and we all have our different preferences. i must say i would not myself have tweeted something about . a tweeted something about. a member of my staff, i don't think that's fair. they that draws attention to them and can put them in the spotlight in ways they haven't chosen . lee ways they haven't chosen. lee anderson might indeed have chosen to do it a little bit better. say himself , rather than better. say himself, rather than talking about poor katie, who be spending a very uncomfortable
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weekend . now, that said , now weekend. now, that said, now everyone should budget. i my entire generation was brought up with that you know look after the pennies , the pound to look the pennies, the pound to look after themselves . waste not want after themselves. waste not want not all that stuff and it drove us crazy when we were kids and we couldn't understand. we could not have everything we wanted. just when we said i want. but it's more important to budget at times rapid change, which is what we're living in at the moment of high inflation, of energy costs and transport costs being much higher than they were even before the pandemic. and in many cases of salaries not being as rising as fast as they did. so yeah , and especially for some so yeah, and especially for some of the that you really want, if you really want, for example, to have your own house, your own flat, and that's got to be your priority and you're going to have to budget extremely carefully. what lee anderson was really getting out course with the argument that some of the
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strikers , the nurses or the strikers, the nurses or the teachers who get very good salaries are being driven to , salaries are being driven to, use foodbanks and was really questioning that couple mps have been questioned about how can somebody on a very substantial income somebody on a very substantial incom e £40,000 a year or more be income £40,000 a year or more be dnven income £40,000 a year or more be driven to a food bank unless some how they might be wasting money. it's a very, very good question . however, perhaps question. however, perhaps they're paying for student debt. perhaps it's transport costs. it's inflation which we all know about and extortionate rents. edwina lots of people are living off credit cards. i mean, britain has a new problem, which is in work, poverty . well, if is in work, poverty. well, if they're a nurse almost certainly had a bursary so they don't have a student debt if they are a train driver . yeah. maybe if train driver. yeah. maybe if they've got a degree an engineering. but most of them i would think probably are not university graduates, although
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some graduates mark up being a train driver is paying think a rather well—paid job that they've always aimed at and we need all these people. what the unions are doing is arguing for pay unions are doing is arguing for pay rises for all of them not just for the low pay. now think they're looking for pay rises of 11 1215 19% for people on nationwid e £10 a year. that i is nationwide £10 a year. that i is wrong. the unions are trying to massage the figures in ways that people like lee anderson mp are correctly challenging . what we correctly challenging. what we all have to do is manage our money to take responsibility . if money to take responsibility. if our bills go up and our income does not go up, then we're going to have to make choices . and the to have to make choices. and the thing that really worries me is the idea that it's all the government's fault , it's all the government's fault, it's all the government's fault, it's all the government's responsibility . all government's responsibility. all governments have do. is, is governments have to do. is, is decide the right way and will decide in the right way and will be hunky dory . and then, of be hunky dory. and then, of course, we're setting ourselves up to be disappointed in up to be very disappointed in government because no government
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can everything and fact most governments can't do very they're much better off the government. the ministers , the government. the ministers, the prime minister, the chance of the exchequer saying to people yeah you know be responsible be careful how you use your money it's your money. you can choose how to use it , it's your money. you can choose how to use it, your priorities and make choices accordingly. oh, well, that's right. i think it before the mini budget you went on twitter and you sparked quite a debate when you i'm afraid the brutal truth is that governments can't do everything and we've got to manage expectations . oh, i didn't get expectations. oh, i didn't get a didn't i get that in the next i mean you get it from all sides. you get it from conservatives who want the government to do more , you know, let's solve the more, you know, let's solve the housing crisis . well, you know, housing crisis. well, you know, pardon . quite a lot of young pardon. quite a lot of young people do manage to save the money and to buy a property and to get on the property market. sometimes do it with the help of
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families . and why not? sometimes families. and why not? sometimes do it by not going on a lot of holidays, maybe not getting that many nights out . and that's many nights out. and that's their choice . sometimes they do their choice. sometimes they do it in other ways by perhaps not choosing be an extremely expensive part of the country . expensive part of the country. i'll tell you what worries me a little bit about. kate's budget, katie's budget is she's living in central london , spending in central london, spending a fortune on transport. now, why didn't she get a bike ? yeah, not didn't she get a bike? yeah, not a bad idea on your bike , a bad idea on your bike, midwinter. i'm an admirer of, lee anderson. i've interviewed him a couple of times. he's a real gentleman and he's got a fascinating life story himself. he's not a privileged man. he was not born with a silver spoon in his mouth. and he has existed on a very tight budget before entering paalam . and but is what entering paalam. and but is what he has said about food banks patronising to those in a lower bracket? is it condescending. and is it a gift for labour?
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yeah i think he is speaking the and he's talking the truth as he sees it, which is really , as you sees it, which is really, as you say, he's a much more authentic personality than a lot of people on all the benches in the house of commons . i on all the benches in the house of commons. i have no objections to food banks if they are used to food banks if they are used to help people out . trouble, if to help people out. trouble, if that's what they're being used for, that's fine. if they're being to play politics, i'm going to get very wary. i'll give you an example of a good one. somalia is in a manchester in a very poor part of manchester, where i went to some film with or shall we say, a rival channel. okay. got chatting . chatting to the chatting. chatting to the wonderful old nun who was in charge. and i asked her about food bank because we've seen people coming to in the food bank clutching three mobile phones. know that of thing. phones. you know that of thing. and she said, look , we have to and she said, look, we have to accept that some people abuse it. people who come in it. but the people who come in who really need it, we can then sit down with them. we can talk
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with can help them with them we can help them through what do. we all have through what i do. we all have to stop that amazing stuff. a fascinating anecdote katie is next. my thanks to edwina currie
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it's 10:00 it's10:00 and this is mark dolan tonight my mark mates guest is , one of the best known guest is, one of the best known people in the country. it's show biz royalty, katie price , who biz royalty, katie price, who gives her first tv interview for two years. and there are plenty truth bombs coming. let me tell you lots to get through in the news agenda with my panel . you news agenda with my panel. you survive on two alcoholic drinks a week . that's apparently what a week. that's apparently what the experts are recommending . the experts are recommending. good luck with that. and after an internet on the topic, how often should you your clothes?
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how do you wash your shirts , how do you wash your shirts, yourt shirts, your how do you wash your shirts, your t shirts, your jumpers how do you wash your shirts, yourt shirts, your jumpers and smalls? plus, tomorrow's papers at exactly 1030 sharp. but next, live on the programme. it is katie price. but first, the headunes katie price. but first, the headlines with our own very glamorous tatiana sanchez . mark, glamorous tatiana sanchez. mark, thank you. this is the latest from the gb newsroom. a series of fresh walkouts have been announced by the unite union as the bitter dispute over pay and staffing continues. they're to walk out for a further ten days. the workers across england, wales and northern ireland joined 10,000 ambulance staff with the gmb union and the royal college of nursing on the 6th of february. downing street says it's to appointed, but they're open to further discussions. unite's ambulance workers are already set to walk out next monday , meanwhile the national monday, meanwhile the national education union says teachers
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across england and wales will go ahead with planned strikes from february the first for seven days. it's part of an ongoing dispute over pay after talks today failed to reach a resolution . the eu says the resolution. the eu says the action could affect more than 23,000 schools. the strike with walkouts by staff at universities train drivers . and universities train drivers. and 100,000 civil servants servants . ukraine's president volodymyr zelenskyy has been holding talks today with . 50 western nations today with. 50 western nations in germany to garner further support in their fight against russia have requested 300 tonnes. the us announced to further tonnes. the us announced to furthe r £2 billion worth of further £2 billion worth of support for ukraine, while the uk says it will provide 14 challenger tanks . meanwhile, challenger tanks. meanwhile, germany have yet to make a decision on whether they will send tanks to the war torn country and the head of nato's military committee, admiral robert bower . military committee, admiral robert bower. countries must make their own decision on giving tens to . ukraine the met
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giving tens to. ukraine the met police commissioner seema rowley has promised a thorough review of the force's culture and standards in an effort to root out corrupt officers such as former officer david carrick. mr. rowley said the next two years are critical to achieving our goals and including assurances such as investing in diversity to become what he calls an anti—rape assist organisation. meanwhile the national police chiefs council are urging police chiefs across and wales to have all checked against national data bases by the end of march. it comes in the end of march. it comes in the wake of the crimes committed . former police officer carrick , who admitted 49 criminal charges , including 24 counts of charges, including 24 counts of rape . and the prime minister has rape. and the prime minister has been given a fixed penalty nofice been given a fixed penalty notice by lancashire police for failing to wear a seatbelt whilst in the back of a moving car . the prime whilst in the back of a moving car. the prime minister was filming a social media clip on his way to yesterday's levelling up announcement in the
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north—west. he's already apologised with his spokesman saying he made an error of judgement in statement downing street says mr. sunak will comply with the fine that be up t 0 £500 tv online comply with the fine that be up to £500 tv online and tv plus radio. this is diabetes and that was i've had to mark dolan tonight . tonight. my thanks to tati on a sanchez who returns in an hour's at 11. welcome to mark dolan tonight every friday and sunday marked tonight the home of viral videos and big stories , guests and and big stories, guests and always big opinions in the news agenda with my panel. could you survive on just two alcoholic dnnks survive on just two alcoholic drinks a week. that's the latest health, i'd say. good luck with that one. also an internet storm on the topic . that one. also an internet storm on the topic. how often that one. also an internet storm on the topic . how often should on the topic. how often should you wash your clothes ? how often you wash your clothes? how often do you wash yourt
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you wash your clothes? how often do you wash your t shirts ? he do you wash yourt shirts? he had jumpers and yes, smalls. plus, tomorrow's at exactly 1030 sharp with full panel reaction . sharp with full panel reaction. all of that to come. but first, it's all of that to come. but first, wsfime all of that to come. but first, it's time for this. all of that to come. but first, it's time for this . yes, it's it's time for this. yes, it's time for mark meets , in which time for mark meets, in which i speak to the biggest names in the world of show biz politics business and beyond . tonight, business and beyond. tonight, one of the best known women in the country whose life story has been as compelling as her career . katie price's life in the limelight started early with modelling career that began at the age of 13 for a clothing line. but it was in 1996 when she ribbed candid herself as jordan and appeared topless on page three in the sun newspaper that her life changed forever, and after that, her face and her body dominated magazine, front covers and newspaper paper front pages. for decades , there pages. for decades, there followed a career reality tv
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with two appearances in i'm a celebrity get me out of here celebrity get me out of here celebrity big brother , which, of celebrity big brother, which, of course, she famously won six of her own reality tv series, including katie price, my crazy life ain't that the truth and. many other hits. katie also released six autobiographies, 11 novels and two series of children's books . novels and two series of children's books. her angel novels series topped the sunday times bestseller list. she's also a devoted mum to five much loved children. she's had her ups. she's had a downs, but she's nothing. if a survivor. and the word boring is not in her vocabulary . katie price, her vocabulary. katie price, welcome to mark tonight. good evening. long time no speak. definitely. it's brilliant to see you looking so well. you've a household name now. i can't. i'm saying this, but for the best part of four decades. what's your secret . well, for
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what's your secret. well, for one, i look younger than i do . one, i look younger than i do. and, you know, i was just here. when you talk about all this stuff that i've done. and it's quite actually, that quite amazing, actually, that have actually done quite a lot in career . and i'm here in my career. and i'm still here and why i'm still and i don't know why i'm still here . and i've definitely had my here. and i've definitely had my ups. definite have my downs. but i am a survivor. yeah. and why do you think public interest in you is so enduring ? i it's you is so enduring? i it's probably because i am actually quite down to earth and my have been through traumatic experiences and i've come top and i talk about everything that happensin and i talk about everything that happens in my life so i suppose i could be inspired and for people i don't ever do anything right. so i don't you know, about people who think i'm role model, but i do do a lot of things wrong as well. so yeah. i mean, you talk about traumatic experiences are there any in particular that really stand as you look back . there's loads .
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you look back. there's loads. there's loads you know, i was for men . obviously, ex—husbands for men. obviously, ex—husbands have been traumatic . i broke my have been traumatic. i broke my faith . my mum being i don't faith. my mum being i don't know, there's just quite a lot of things i've had three kidnap threats , ransoms just. it just threats, ransoms just. it just so happens actually my therapist said to me he's never met someone. who's that actual real trauma events happen in their life is my is sometimes one person one bit of trauma and they're affected. i've had loads no i'm so sorry about, you know so many of the things been through since we work . and you through since we work. and you know, as i said, you are a total survivor. you're incredible. be genuine. what you see is , is genuine. what you see is, is what you get with with katy price, with the pricey . what price, with the pricey. what about what about the accident your feet? what happened ? well, your feet? what happened? well, i was on holidays. the kids get my teeth done, as you can see. so what ? but same time i was
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so what? but same time i was mucking about. did you floss today ? nah. i don't need to . and today? nah. i don't need to. and as i said, i was on holiday. the kids, while i was getting my teeth . now we just. lovely, teeth. now we just. lovely, lovely , perry. just jumped over lovely, perry. just jumped over bushin lovely, perry. just jumped over bush in the dark and i fell 20 foot drop into an underground park and. well, i'm lucky to be alive, actually yeah, yeah. and the surgeons do a good job. and are you okay now. oh can't hear you, katy , can you hear me now? you, katy, can you hear me now? do you hear? how long i can't hear you? this is tv. can you hear you? this is tv. can you hear me ? that you know what hear me? that you know what i think is happening? katy i think that your teeth. hang on. signal i don't know what's happened, but can't see what we'll do we're going to reconnect with lovely katy perry. i told you that this woman not have the word boring in vocabulary. let me tell you a story about katie price . we worked together a few price. we worked together a few years ago on an internet radio
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station called fubar radio, which is a brilliant radio station that i'd highly recommend you check out . it recommend you check out. it showcases a lot of talent football . well, we did a show football. well, we did a show that this was before gb news i was desperate to have a broadcast platform. i could have free speech and well, football did the job and they managed to pair up me and katie as co—presenters of a morning show and we broke the internet pretty much every week because of the outrageous things that katie said . they sounded far fetched, said. they sounded far fetched, but they were all true because she's just one of those people that has a crazy life. but i'll never forget the that we had our first production meeting and all the bosses there and it was all really important and high level, except baby with her except she had her baby with her in pram and she's basically in a pram and she's basically rocking baby jett whilst discussing, you know, the important of the radio show she then sort of scoops him up out of the out of the pram she's feeding with milk and being the ultimate and that's katie price all over businesswoman celebs
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sea and mum . katie, i'm so glad sea and mum. katie, i'm so glad we got you back . listen, how we got you back. listen, how were you feeling since. since that accident , are were you feeling since. since that accident, are you. were you feeling since. since that accident , are you. are were you feeling since. since that accident, are you. are you better ? i'm getting it. better? i'm getting it. obviously, it's been a life changing experience for me. i can't ever run again. although i did sites surgeons wipe on me, my air boots . do you think did sites surgeons wipe on me, my air boots. do you think i'll be able to do a marathon again? they said no and, but other than that, i can still haul but them. all of rex's sizes i can do. yeah, but yeah it was eight on you because i was in a wheelchair for ten months, so i've experienced what it's like being in a wheelchair and people do treat you different when in a wheelchair and what i've experienced and i have respect people who are in a wheelchair because it's not easy to get around. yeah and also, did you feel that you were sort of spoken to differently , that spoken to differently, that you're kind of a second class citizen when you were in a wheelchair? it's definitely different completely. and do stare at you. but what was the
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weird thing for me because i just met carl. it was a month into our relationship and then right right there he is caring for me because i literally could not walk. so but you know, i've got to i've thought few more operations go and life goes isn't it so yeah. i mean how do you handle these ups and downs, katie are you a positive thinker 7 katie are you a positive thinker ? how is your mental health? you know, the best thing i do now, i have therapy every which had years ago, for example , i know years ago, for example, i know what my triggers are now on my instagram stuff. you i don't really attack anyone or do anything anymore because we're going to get made doesn't get you anywhere . so now, not even you anywhere. so now, not even if i receive a text from someone and i want to go through that. i think about think about it and then i just don't bother. and it has lot . yeah, you look has helped a lot. yeah, you look are, i've got to say, radio and it's not just the teeth and your skin tone. you look brilliant. but i can see that you're in a good place well and is
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good place as well and this is fantastic i just told the fantastic news i just told the viewers when we lost the line there story about you and me there a story about you and me at football, the internet, radio stations , i thought was a great stations, i thought was a great show. great radio station. it's still going. and i talked about first really important production meeting . we're production meeting. we're discussing programme and you discussing the programme and you had jett with you who probably about one at the time you baby son and you're having the and you're feeding your baby and i thought that was typically heavily pregnant and you man was heavily pregnant and you man was heavily pregnant and you man was heavily pregnant as well. exactly right. so feeding a baby and incubating the next one i'm family always comes first, doesn't it . well yeah like to doesn't it. well yeah like to not literally if you saw what i've underneath. in fact i've got anything on because of this so it harvey out the kids about that and i'm like kids you got me quite well i'm on telly i've just got to calm harvey a bit anyway that's my life a lot and i do . i do hope we can have a i do. i do hope we can have a
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word with harvey. he's very special kids. a very bright kid, and you've looked after him , you and you've looked after him, you know, some viewers well know. but but he's had quite a few health challenges, issues with his autism and a disorder called prada willi syndrome. you're proud of him, but you've been through lot looking after him often , your own. tell me about often, your own. tell me about that. often, your own. tell me about that . well, yeah. any care about that. well, yeah. any care about their or nurse or anyone like that gives you so much respect because you know i don't think a lot of people appreciate hard work that goes into looking like looking after someone like harvey generally there's a lot of people out there who know of don't know my own. they know how hard wouldn't hard work is and i wouldn't change this change it for anything this weekend i know not going to weekend i know i'm not going to get sleep i i've got get much sleep. i know i've got a basically read his slides . mom a basically read his slides. mom do this mum do that. i wouldn't change it for anything. i love it. my house is hectic. the kids animals and i would not change. how would you ? yeah. i mean, as
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how would you? yeah. i mean, as say i look if he's around after the break do do pop him in front of the camera we'll say hi. i know much you love him and you know much you love him and you know i think that it's so creditable to you what you've done with harvey off your own bat often without and certainly without much spousal support . without much spousal support. let's talk about the media. they you, katie , have they tried to you, katie, have they tried to break you as well . so this is break you as well. so this is the thing i mean this industry and i've shed a lot of my life i wouldn't change it. i'm very that i wouldn't change it. i'm very thati can wouldn't change it. i'm very that i can google things and look at my life but i to have a really good relationship the media but it's like i'm not joking if every single day they bought something and most of it 99% of it is untrue . like it 99% of it is untrue. like it they're awful to meet the minute it's not. they always want to put me down, down. so i kind of get used to it. but is drained and you know, it has affected my
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mental health, but i still do it. they are true. the media is not the same anymore. like they don't like if i do put something on instagram , they do ask me to on instagram, they do ask me to take it down because i've got more people follow made them buy them magazines or newspapers. so ihave them magazines or newspapers. so i have a taste of your own medicine . i think i. katie, why medicine. i think i. katie, why do you think the media have changed? is it social media? why are they so now, so negative ? i are they so now, so negative? i think the english major, the worst media anyway. but you know, i love with them all through the years, you know, loved my press calls. but wish they would give me a break because i'm not a bad person at all. actually a good person. all. i'm actually a good person. i've heart . but all. i'm actually a good person. i've heart. but i i've got a good heart. but i have myself . people have surrounded myself. people who who have taken advantage of my kindness , a weakness. but my kindness, a weakness. but yeah, if that's journalism out there just can be a bright it's you know i'm back. i've got you itake you know i'm back. i've got you i take what bottom and i've come out that and now there's a
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comeback for the price well to right that's what the next part of this conversation is all about. after the break, we're going to money. we're going to talk plastic surgery and we're going to talk about katie's incredible new project, the comeback is on. katie price is back in 3 minutes. don't go anywhere .
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welcome back to mark tonight and i'm mark meet special with model entrepreneur , author and tv entrepreneur, author and tv personality katie price. katie back a quick one for you any more ? i would love more love more? i would love more love more? i would love more love more kids actually what you to look out for channel 4 because there's a surprise this year. okay well i'm glad you've given me a clue about that because
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let's talk about your comeback . let's talk about your comeback. you've got your health back. you know , fantastic. and you are know, fantastic. and you are ready to essentially be back telly, back in magazines and of course, across all. what's the plan . well, obviously , up until plan. well, obviously, up until when my mucky mansion i'm on the second series that goes to air next month and then i filming the third series then the baby if started the documentary with harvey which i'm proud he had the 98 twice on the trot . sadly the 98 twice on the trot. sadly he didn't win, even though he thought we had won. he stood up and clapped myself . so i'm just and clapped myself. so i'm just doing lots more tv. i'm still doing lots more tv. i'm still doing my only fans as well, which i love doing sets like reminds me of the all time some iused reminds me of the all time some i used to like low data fight charm all of that. yeah i'm charm and all of that. yeah i'm just doing a lot of tv stuff really . pick and choose what really. pick and choose what i want to do now . i don't want to do now. i don't have a manager , i just manage myself . manager, i just manage myself. i'm a lot happier that way.
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credit to channel 4 for commissioning katie price's mucky mansion. it's fantastic telly. if enjoy doing that . i telly. if enjoy doing that. i love it . it telly. if enjoy doing that. i love it. it means i'm at home and i'm working home in my house. but together so it was literally sitting here for two years and you know, because of the trauma i had to have, i just couldn't get into the house. but now absolutely love . but the now i absolutely love. but the house peaks we house is twin peaks and we really bedrooms is really seven bedrooms is a little bit pace and do you still feel comfortable the idea of photoshoots for men's magazines 7 photoshoots for men's magazines ? is that something that you're ready to do again ? do absolutely ready to do again? do absolutely love getting my kick off. that's why do only fans but i don't really do men's mags anymore but then i've done the ultimate you know, the cover of playboy for the american one. oh stick type with the fellow date . i've done with the fellow date. i've done loads of fights. you know i've beenin loads of fights. you know i've been in the 100 sexiest. why don't i blow trumpet just a
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little bit more ? but no, little bit more? but no, seriously, when you look back at what i've done, it's actually an incredible journey and i started when i was 17. there's not a lot of 17 year olds who would literally fly around the world on own , do photoshoots on their own, do photoshoots and, you know . yeah, and had to. and, you know. yeah, and had to. and i to try out really early and put life on my own as well. now i have this i remember asking you katie , about the asking you katie, about the early parts of your and when you started in any industry i think you wanted career obviously you wanted to make a bit of cash did always want to be famous as well might aim for. well i was trying to be registered nurse and then i got into this industry but i swear i didn't think i would last this long. i wanted to be famous, but trust it's not what it's come out to be. and i know there's lots of people out there who want to be famous and get the money helps . but to be the money helps. but to be honest, i'm not money orientated anyway. i never have done. i'm not flash person, although
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not a flash person, although i do cars . but i'm do love my pink cars. but i'm banks and life in yeah money you know money can be the root of all evil as well. and i've had many experiences in my life where people get greedy around me with money and it just ruins, ruins. things really. so i'd want to look cool and be rich . want to look cool and be rich. they go, yeah, well, that's not a bad shout. look, i don't want ask a personal question about, your finances, but you've had your finances, but you've had your ups and downs moneywise . your ups and downs moneywise. some people have said you were worth 60 million. is that true and if you still got it? i worth 60 million. is that true and if you still got it ? i never and if you still got it? i never discuss money, but also anyone who's out there into bankruptcy , not the end of the world, you know , of people go into know, of people go into bankruptcy . and i think it's bankruptcy. and i think it's quite beat them into bankruptcy. actually so yeah , it's made me actually so yeah, it's made me revalue things and put things straight. so happy. everything in my life is in place. never be embarrassed about being in a bankruptcy . at all. i know is
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bankruptcy. at all. i know is just don't have with people because the lawyers the ones who get the money. yeah well look i'm really glad that you're in a good place financially. i mean, do you do you feel like you can rebuild so that you have what you and your family need in the years to come? do you feel like you can recover? do you know what mark? i don't think i know . and i am. that's what i and also at the end of the summer i'm doing enough with at all also junior's 18th this year princess is and harvey is 21st so i'm looking for a nightclub there who want to enjoy celebrating harvey 21st because he wants to be in a nightclub with a blondie themed . so why with a blondie themed. so why not do an event where people can buy tickets and enjoy 21st? so if any clubs out there that want to do that , bring it on reach. to do that, bring it on reach. and actually the email market gb
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news dot uk. and if you are a club that would like accommodate what would surely the party what would surely be the party the me a line, i'll the year drop me a line, i'll pass that to katie. katie pass that on to katie. katie tell me about only now this tell me about only fans now this is popular subscription is a popular subscription service and a subscription service and a subscription service . members of the public service. members of the public pay a service. members of the public pay a certain amount every and they exclusive photographs they get exclusive photographs and video from the pricey tell more what thing is like a lot of girls now on instagram or the social they literally show nothing in bikinis and underwear that was me because i made a career out of it. i'm not just going to do that for so when only fans came along, first of all, i was a bit like, oh, you know, because i don't do site, you know, because can go as far as you like when it but you don't have to do that. so i realise i'm quite happy doing what i did before underwear swim where and behind the scenes that people don't see on social. and i absolutely love it. i enjoy it so much and i'm good and there's
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one pricing. yeah. t right, and i'm actually it's not about income stream . i think that. income stream. i think that. kerry katona made a fortune on only forbes is she a rival ? kerry katona made a fortune on only forbes is she a rival? no, there's loads . you know, it there's loads. you know, it doesn't matter what you look like . x0 doesn't matter what you look like . xo onlyfans is a platform like. xo onlyfans is a platform anyone can go to. even you. mark even in what would might look beyond onlyfans. katie well, i don't know what your hidden secret smile . yeah, well i'm not secret smile. yeah, well i'm not sure that worth saying. i'll be honest with. you'll have to ask mrs. dolan how well i was talking about kerry carey trying to get me to do it. age is a and i'm glad i've done it now . i'm i'm glad i've done it now. i'm glad kerry is in a good place in turn to self around and really pleased with that she's of the many people who's been ages and she's still there when we did a radio show together you talked about your breast augmentation and i can't what happened. but your your your chest size has
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grown and then shrunk has it and come back again a little bit like the british economy you know i mean peaks and troughs . know i mean peaks and troughs. are you planning any further procedures? will you ever have plastic surgery again , katie? oh plastic surgery again, katie? oh my god. that that's just a no brainer , isn't it? what do you brainer, isn't it? what do you think? of course these are actually the pretty saw of pain taking . our 2120, say, safe. but taking. our 2120, say, safe. but the thing is, in the daytime , the thing is, in the daytime, you see me, people come understand why i've had them done. because i never show them unless it's for onlyfans. but i do it for myself , not for the do it for myself, not for the jobs. if there's anyone out there who wants to get their boobs on, don't feel self, not there who wants to get their boc anyone ion't feel self, not there who wants to get their boc anyone else feel self, not there who wants to get their bocanyone else oral self, not there who wants to get their bocanyone else or forelf, not there who wants to get their bocanyone else or for your ot for anyone else or for your career . okay? i for anyone else or for your career. okay? i mean, not just for for the the for the uninitiated, that's about two kilos per breast. uninitiated, that's about two kilos per breast . because uninitiated, that's about two kilos per breast. because i made a documentary. it about. yeah, it's you know, it's a fair old package. let me tell you . but package. let me tell you. but can i just finally finish with this ? katie which is what she's
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this? katie which is what she's questioning? yeah, exactly . and questioning? yeah, exactly. and final question . what what what final question. what what what do you want from the future ? do you want from the future? what i want from the future that we want to make a comeback and prove to people because i've been there, told my story literally. i hit rock bottom that fat that i tried to commit suicide and it's come up from that and remember that nothing is that bad . it's just when you is that bad. it's just when you were in that third place, your mind ruminates and you think you can't get out of that rut, but you do it. if i can do it, you can do it. so i want to bring my perfumes out, my underwear, swimwear calendars, everything i used to do. but the different this time i haven't got a manager doing it. i'm doing it myself . so look forward to them. myself. so look forward to them. principles again. and who knows, maybe i can do a tv. principles again. and who knows, maybe i can do a tv . yo ma, we'd maybe i can do a tv. yo ma, we'd love to have you at gb news me tell you because your everything, our view is like your authentic. you'll keeping it real. what you see is what
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you get. katie price congratulates evans on an incredible career and life love to the kids . love to, harvey. to the kids. love to, harvey. thank you so many other folks i think try and ask you maxine the bright side . harvey, do you want bright side. harvey, do you want to on we went, no, to come on tape? we went, no, thanks, so that was that. thanks, mummy. so that was that. yeah. oh so keep bringing out my old biography. five years ago was the last one to trust me. jeez this. that's the one to wait. i'm put down a bull just like katie herself . a thrill to like katie herself. a thrill to see you again. do join us in the studio soon and thanks for making the time. the one, the only katie price . fascinating only katie price. fascinating conversation. we'll look back to reality next because we got the papers it's tomorrow's front pages don't anywhere .
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well it's time now for tomorrow's papers and we start with the times and they lead with the times and they lead with javid backs fee see a gp charging for gp appointments and a&e visits his crucial to the survival of the nhs former health secretary . sajid javid health secretary. sajid javid has declared also can be beaten . the minister for women and equalities has said the law must not conflate people with predators . how about the daily predators. how about the daily mail now ? woman problem a labour mail now? woman problem a labour mp has declared her party has a woman problem. rosie duffield spoke out today after she was jeered by male colleagues in the commons and then shunned by party leaders. she said it felt as if was in an abusive relationship . and in a blow . sir relationship. and in a blow. sir keir starmer's hopes of becoming prime minister. the 51 year old mp admitted she would struggle to convince voters that labour was not sexist well. we know a lot about that story on this program because rosie duffield
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was an exclusive guest on mark dolan tonight last sunday when we broke this story. dolan tonight last sunday when we broke this story . the dolan tonight last sunday when we broke this story. the daily express next shock death of high banks by 2027. banking campaigners are calling for high street branches to saved from extinction as warn almost all be shut within four years. every branch gone . by 2027. the daily branch gone. by 2027. the daily mirror now lawbreaker pm number two another fine mess sunak punished for seatbelt blunder video rap comes months after partygate payout are we seriously comparing and conflating those two stories i'll ask my panel whether they give a about rishi sunak's seatbelt or should the media up the weekend keep children at home during school strikes ahead? teachers tell parents. the independent tory party chairman is made to pay million pound to tax man and he to gag the independent with threats revealing his dispute . the sun
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revealing his dispute. the sun newspaper coronation silks ditched charles told to drop his breaches brilliant headline headune breaches brilliant headline headline of the day king charles has been told to break with centuries of tradition and drop the wearing of silks , stockings the wearing of silks, stockings and breaches. at his coronation, the opted wear the monarch has opted to wear a military uniform instead when he's at westminster he's crowned at westminster abbey on may the sixth. a senior source said. senior aides think look too dated well. he's got a great pair of pins. look too dated well. he's got a great pair of pins . i say bring great pair of pins. i say bring on the breaches . telegraph on the breaches. telegraph houday on the breaches. telegraph holiday boost as eu delays fingerprint checking and sunak fine not wearing seat belt also germany refuses request to send tanks to ukraine and the daily star number one for boffins eternal youth sorted it makes eggheads ageing with sound therapy the vexing issue of everlasting appears to have been cracked by eggheads using low frequency sound waves, and those
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are front pages . let's get are front pages. let's get reaction from my all star panel of agony aunts and best selling author hilary freeman . author hilary freeman. broadcaster and journalist and television. personal and entrepreneur angie . and let's entrepreneur angie. and let's have a look . all of these front have a look. all of these front pages. i'm very in this story. angie best. sajid javid the former secretary backs a fee . former secretary backs a fee. see your gp. in other words, you pay a see your gp. in other words, you pay a certain amount of money for an appointment with a gp. he argues it will save nhs millions last time i was on, i told you that i you this. i said, are they doing this stuff with the nhs because they want to privatise , they want they don't privatise, they want they don't want the nhs anymore. and this is just proof, if you ask me, they don't the nhs. but you , they don't the nhs. but you, you've got all people that come in from other countries come off the boats and they go to their local hospitals because they want to get all the things fixed that they couldn't get fixed in
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their country . and then it's their country. and then it's down to our hospitals , nhs to do down to our hospitals, nhs to do it. it's managed. that's all they've got, we've got enough of everything we. just don't know how to manage it properly because it's too big . however, because it's too big. however, if we had to pay a certain amount for appointment, i'm assuming this policy would be you know, would would accommodate those on low incomes . i think if you if you don't have the money i suspect get a free but those free appointment but for those that afford it would it not that can afford it would it not make people appreciate the service getting little service they're getting little better. know because if better. i don't know because if i'm going to pay to see a gp, i don't want that gp to be run by the n8 by the big pharma . i the n8 by the big pharma. i don't want him to answer that answer my questions with two words and i don't want 5 minutes and i want much better quality. if i'm going to pay to go to see a doctor. i mean, lots of people book gp appointments and don't up which is a huge drain on the nation's resources hilary yeah mean well i don't know how they
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managed to book any more or not sign up yeah i mean it's easier to tickets for peter kay isn't it. yeah. yeah exactly . oh it. yeah. yeah exactly. oh madonna. yeah you're right but yeah.i madonna. yeah you're right but yeah. i mean i agree. i agree with angie . if you, if you have with angie. if you, if you have to pay for something, you with angie. if you, if you have to pay for something , you expect to pay for something, you expect a certain thing in return and it's going to destroy the doctor patient relationship . the doctor patient relationship. the doctor patient relationship. the doctor patient contract that we have in this and we have done for a long time where the is somebody time where the gp is somebody that you trust and, who you confide in and who cares about you . it's going to become like you. it's going to become like a transaction. and also what about , you know, if you're somebody who a lot of things wrong who has a lot of things wrong with it's a tax on being with you, it's a tax on being listen it. it's like , you listen to it. it's like, you know, to make a lot of know, you have to make a lot of appointments. pay appointments. you have to pay for healthy and for them if you're healthy and you never see you from one year to yeah mean i right. to the next. yeah mean i right. this is a bit of a cross parallel. here we go. i demand. i'm not afraid. i am the new alan partridge aidan magee. i a moped and there are some boroughs now that the bike bays
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for mopeds were always free. yeah and then the boroughs charged a pound day just to organise the base a little better on. people up in arms about it . i thought it better on. people up in arms about it. i thought it was a game changer because you had the charge . people essentially charge. people essentially dumped their motorbikes . they'd dumped their motorbikes. they'd sit there for weeks on end, sometimes months on end, getting, getting and neglected. the minute people paid a pound a day, suddenly the bays were clear. you had space to park. if people found , even if it was people found, even if it was a tenner for , an appointment, tenner for, an appointment, that's the prostitute. i was thinking . well they go and it thinking. well they go and it meant that could actually meant that they could actually an that day. an appointment that day. i wonder people would wonder whether people would embrace would. embrace that. yeah, they would. i he i mean i'm also big fan of he consults i'm type one diabetic i used service quite used to service quite i quite like my laptop speaking like going on my laptop speaking to to face through to someone face to face through a that's absolutely a video lens that's absolutely fine me. fact my local fine with me. fact my local surgery have been with the surgery have been with me in the last just dispensing last few weeks just dispensing and . the point and things like that. the point about the pound , for, the, for about the pound, for, the, for the bike, but that's interesting so i'm when i was a kid all the mainline stations around london started was started charging. i think it was about 20 to 30 paid to go to the
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toilet. you'll actually have to spend spend penny. so spend a penny. spend a penny. so i originally thought i thought originally i thought it and then it was scandalous and then i thought, actually, thought, well, actually, you know what? that's what it's really a tender know what? that's what it's reallylight, a tender know what? that's what it's reallylight, there's a tender know what? that's what it's reallylight, there's a and er open light, there's an in and out sort turnstile kind of out sort of turnstile kind of things going to a football things like going to a football match almost, you know. and i thought good. and thought it was quite good. and then i've noticed really recently i've actually away recently i've actually done away with know what's with this. i don't know what's happened there probably covid yeah, it probably is. yeah, it probably probably but yeah, it probably is. yeah, it pdidn'ty probably but yeah, it probably is. yeah, it pdidn't think probably but yeah, it probably is. yeah, it pdidn't think having)ly but yeah, it probably is. yeah, it pdidn't think having thought|t i didn't think having thought that was a idea in the first that was a bad idea in the first place, thought actually place, i thought it was actually a idea. difference a bad idea. but the difference between and your doctors between that and your doctors know it's a little bit different if you pay for your doctor's appointment think people if you pay for your doctor's appgoingant think people if you pay for your doctor's appgoing to think people if you pay for your doctor's appgoing to think think people if you pay for your doctor's appgoing to think oh,1k people if you pay for your doctor's appgoing to think oh, thiszople if you pay for your doctor's appgoing to think oh, this is)le are going to think oh, this is what happens with a lot of other things that you have to start paying things that you have to start paying yeah, well, i've paying for. yeah, well, i've paid my money i've done my already five. turn up. already pay five. don't turn up. it really matter because it doesn't really matter because i've that's i've paid yeah actually that's not a i guess not going to help as a i guess it's mail an it's not the daily mail an interesting story eight and labour's woman problem is rosie duffield he spoke on this program last sunday about issues around trans ideology. this woman is not bigot, she's not a
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transphobe she simply stood up for women's hard, long fought for women's hard, long fought for rights , only spaces and, and for rights, only spaces and, and against the idea of trans ideology which challenges the nofion ideology which challenges the notion of biological sex. this is this labour's new anti yeah i think it certainly is. i also think it certainly is. i also think it certainly is. i also think it could be an achilles for them in the next election. i'm not necessarily think it's a i'm not necessarily think it's a i don't necessarily think it's the thing that lose the kind of thing that can lose an but i do think an election them. but i do think it the tories it was something the tories would again again would go out again and again and again the parties are again even other the parties are you're challenge you're looking to challenge a policy that probably it looks like a like they might form a government time, if government next time, even if it's if it is a hung it's only if it is a hung parliament or an opportunity. c but yeah, it could but i think yeah, it could certainly mean certainly come back. i mean i think starmer that think keir starmer that interview with nick ferrari maybe ac months ago saying he believes spaces for believes in safe spaces for women, didn't really . believes in safe spaces for women, didn't really. he women, but he didn't really. he stopped of actually stopped short of actually defining is unless defining what a woman is unless i've wrong. so i think i've got that wrong. so i think but it's something that keeps being levelled level back him again again. again and again and again. as i say, necessarily sure it's say, i'm necessarily sure it's an election loser, election winner going to come winner even. but going to come back to them. so what you
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back to them. so what do you think about this, hilary? because i think that it could because i do think that it could be starmer by be keir starmer is by that interview which he willing to interview in which he willing to define a woman was. yeah define what a woman was. yeah yeah. and i think that is a difficult i don't think it is a question. difficult question. it isn't difficult question. it isn't difficult question. he's question. i think he's he's scared of offending people and he needs to stand up and get a backbone and say, right this is you know, this is what i believe , because otherwise it's science in anyway is the anti—semitism situation where. does this this is cults going on basically. and he is trying to appease everybody rather than actually saying what he thinks and fighting against it and saying what he thinks is common sense . what he thinks is common sense. so, yes, a woman, a man's a man . you know, he's he's not to offend anybody. but for the that will get you cancer and his rhetoric good he i mean this is this is an of it that she was shouted by other labour and ps and that's why she's written written this latest article not to shout her down she does have some verbal stuff that i'd shout
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down to sometimes okay. yeah she's not my i'd be stuck it if you did a straw poll across all labour voters i mean obviously it's hypothetical but i'd be staggered if most people would didn't take umbrage that comment even with myself even if they agree with myself things starmer and things that keir starmer and party stands for. yeah interesting stuff we'll look lots to get through from lots more to get through from the including that story in the daily express shock death the high street banks by 2027 in four years time it's predicted the branches will be gone . you the branches will be gone. you need at your branch we'll that very very shortly also charles is going to get rid of that fancy tights he would normally traditionally wear the incoming monarch he's going to wear military fatigues instead. what do you think about that? how should he dress for the coronation? also based upon the latest medical health advice, could you survive on just two alcoholic drinks a week ? and alcoholic drinks a week? and after an internet storm on topic, how often should you wash
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your clothes? see, shortly .
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a big reaction on email to all about the nhs former health secretary sajid javid has said we should pay for gp appointments that he's in the newspaper this nicholas how will waste and mismanaged meat get viewed if people get taxed on top of mandatory tax already being taken before goes to the bank. how about this from leslie who says hi? so we not have to pay who says hi? so we not have to pay national insurance anymore if we're paying for nhs gp visits , this is our service that visits, this is our service that we pay for that the nhs has forgotten in wokeness that we own and that we bankroll . the on own and that we bankroll. the on goes on. it does not belong to the nurses or doctors. it's ours . i beg you to read this as you seem to be more like the bbc
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than like to believe. oh, than you like to believe. oh, leslie and, what a slap in the face. not, but let's see if you catch me slipping into mode at any time you , me an email and any time you, me an email and i'll deal with it. because that was those letters are very triggering . thank you leslie. triggering. thank you leslie. and keep those emails coming . and keep those emails coming. love it when we agree. i love it when we don't agree what this show is all about. a word show is all about. a quick word on charles, the sun on prince charles, the sun newspaper charles told to drop his breaches and silks. these rather fancy tight stockings are going to go and he's going to wear instead . wear military apparel instead. you're a bit of a clotheshorse . you're a bit of a clotheshorse. so what's your view on this? oh, no . think he should wear his no. think he should wear his kilt? oh oh, his kilt in this part. in a kilt doesn't he. yeah think it looks excellent. how big you think his forehead actually is. so we've all got it's actually not about the, the, the monarch. he could send me to the tower tonight. oh, charles. he's actually pretty elegant guy, isn't he. yes yeah, i just going to show you what the sun have done with the mock
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up, but this is a there's a real fancy silks. okay let's just show our viewers as well , but show our viewers as well, but really, really traditional , really, really traditional, almost mediaeval oh, yeah. it's about datejust. yeah. so you think what do think dropped the breaches. yeah, yeah eight. and you are the best dressed man on gb news. i quite like the type of one touch twice in my life almost to wedding when i was five because trousers five because of my trousers with two no with some two which is no longer with some tights away she had tights to take away that she had last a fancy last year. i went to a fancy dress as margaret dress party dressed as margaret thatcher's tights thatcher's hotspurs and tights girls. they look quite comfortable going the comfortable so be going with the iron. aidan's not iron. maggie this aidan's not for turning how about a quick story also in the express but it's an important story shock death the high street banks by 2027 banks to close all high street branches gone in four years yes or no ? i don't think years yes or no? i don't think that that's likely . but then that that's likely. but then again, i been to my bank for about five years. so do we need them, i think old people need them. yes, yes just in the bank them. yes, yes just in the bank the other day and. i know you got loads of dosh and i thought
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about. i thought about while was standing there, all these old in line and they just desperately wanted to talk to the teller . wanted to talk to the teller. good morning roger. oh what do i do with this letter, darling ? do with this letter, darling? and i thought, what's going to happen to those old people? happen to all those old people? yeah, well , no happen to all those old people? yeah, well, no bank. happen to all those old people? yeah, well , no bank. well, yeah, well, no bank. well, i would say. is this the cashless society, this type thing? society, this i this type thing? i would beef up the roll i would i would beef up the roll of post offices and i'd have one in every town and village. oh that's ludicrous. be really it's owned by royal mail it's owned by a french company and our post office in, henley has got one poor little woman serving the whole of henley and she just can't do it. that's a lot of catalogue can't close to deal with . yes. yeah that's. not with. yes. yeah that's. not going to work i was in the post office taxing my car. blimey and inoficed office taxing my car. blimey and i noticed that the line goes dunng i noticed that the line goes during the lunch hour when everybody runs to the post office , goes out the door and office, goes out the door and it's the post office, doesn't care is well scratching his
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yeah. oh yeah . post office . i yeah. oh yeah. post office. i think it's nice looking to talk about military you know he hasn't lost his shirt. well that's the line goes out the door and there's just not enough money put in to running post office to them be able to function as banks as well. yeah. banks banks to change the way they operate affects people to use branches. if you buy a house now, you still have to go the now, you still have to go to the branch make cash transfer. branch to make cash transfer. yeah, what yeah, fair point. what about this ? health experts in canada this? health experts in canada advised the zero alcoholic dnnksis advised the zero alcoholic drinks is the only safe limit. blimey, i wouldn't be going to canada any time ? health experts canada any time? health experts in the uk are offering a compromise of . two alcoholic compromise of. two alcoholic dnnks compromise of. two alcoholic drinks per week. blimey. age and what's the point? yeah. now i how to drink since sunday. and i actually feel better for actually feel better for actually sunday. follows any five days but i mean normally i'd go have one every three or four days to just stop. tiny
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changes made a difference to me. ihave changes made a difference to me. i have a little spell of no alcohol. twice a year. for about alcohol. twice a year. for about a month or so. it doesn't cost me a good yard. i think it's important recalibrate being important to recalibrate being a diabetic. i mean, i don't diabetic. but i mean, i don't look you know, i'd look mean. you know, i'd obviously advise anyone. you've look mean. you know, i'd obvausly advise anyone. you've look mean. you know, i'd obva problem,e anyone. you've look mean. you know, i'd obva problem, go nyone. you've look mean. you know, i'd obv a problem, go nyon see ou've look mean. you know, i'd obv a problem, go nyon see a 've look mean. you know, i'd obva problem, go nyonsee a gp. got a problem, go and see a gp. but i do wonder. a but i do wonder. two drinks a week. point or i week. what is the point or i make by revealing a lot with that question? i think are . that question? i think you are. i probably only have about on two drinks week. okay i know, two drinks a week. okay i know, i i have really cheap diet i know. i have really cheap diet . and what those two drinks. i'm usually gin and slimline. oh, nice . yeah. decent, decent. what nice. yeah. decent, decent. what you are a bit of a health guru, so you probably think too. a month . if you have more than if month. if you have more than if you to have more than two a week, you to look at your mental health. number one, why you're so and needing and then so stressed and needing and then worry about your liver and your kidneys because your livers getting a chance to clean itself and the alcohol, an alcohol and it hardens the liver. we all know that. so there you go. well, look, we're to come to our
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last story, but let's balance out that debate in relation to rosie duffield, the labour mp, and trans debate. and there and that trans debate. and there are plenty members of the trans community who feel deeply offended and frankly quite unsafe having to go to a facility that does not accommodate them in. the gender to which they identify . so, you to which they identify. so, you know, there's two sides to every coin . that's a debate that we coin. that's a debate that we will continue to have here on the channel. now, look, let's get to our last story. i've been looking forward to this. well done on the team done to rebecca on the team spotting it. in fact, it's just a few seconds we've got for a debate on. tick tock. how often to wash your clothes, for example nightwear? a personal line said she's been in the same pyjamas three weeks. so what do we think we actually have to be talking this, telling people when and to how clothes? well, i don't think you need to your pyjamas until they start getting crunchy and until they start talking back to you my qpr dressing has not been dressing gown has not been washed since took out the washed since i took out the packaging years ago. and washed since i took out the
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packwould years ago. and washed since i took out the packwould you years ago. and washed since i took out the packwould you donate 30. and washed since i took out the packwould you donate various why would you donate various footballers . on the and made it footballers. on the and made it like that? why are you wearing pyjamas ? yeah, i know exactly. pyjamas? yeah, i know exactly. it's not 99% naked for 15 years. hilary, are you going ? laundry hilary, are you going? laundry room? we're so cold. my body. i have to worry about six layers under my pyjamas. i've got a rule which smalls every day . no, rule which smalls every day. no, otherwise. yeah. otherwise you know, just wait till people complain to my brilliant panel please come back soon folks and most importantly to you for your company. we'll do it all again tomorrow at eight with the people's. our headline this people's. our headline is this next . next hello. it was a next. next hello. it was a beautiful day out there on friday and it's going to stay that way into the weekend . that way into the weekend. england and wales milder , england and wales milder, though, in the far west, spreading into parts of scotland and northern ireland during the evening , accompanied by and evening, accompanied by and windy weather . well. meanwhile windy weather. well. meanwhile for, much of the uk as we head into friday evening it's clear
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skies . light winds. temperatures skies. light winds. temperatures soon falling below freezing widely and by the end of the night, minus three minus four celsius across much the uk. minus seven to ten degrees over some of snow covered northern england and north—east. scott freezing folk patches around first thing as well from the vale of york into the midlands. whilst march southwest whilst march is southwest england. they'll be slow to clear cause some issues the roads first thing but a completely different story for western scotland, for northern here. cloud and rain have been increasing through the night and a strengthening wind gales around western coast of scotland . the northern isles by the along with those outbreaks of rain those outbreaks of rain will reach of the grampians into cold air leading to risk of freezing rain by the afternoon. here but support from the cloudy , damp weather in the northwest . we're also going to see that too dry weather across much of the rest of the uk with a clear
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skies once again leading to frost. this time it's more confined on saturday night, frost. this time it's more confined on saturday night , the confined on saturday night, the southeastern quarter of the uk with the east east anglia and the southeast seeing temperatures widely below minus three celsius and some freezing once again to contend with. elsewhere across the it's a cloudy and damp start to sunday outbreaks of rain into northern ireland western fringes of england and wales. an increasing breeze and increasingly temperatures by sunday. monday in some western areas up to ten or 11 celsius. meanwhile, we keep the chilly air in the southeast into the start of next week .
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good evening . good evening. i'm good evening . i'm tatiana good evening. i'm tatiana sanchez. in the gb newsroom am a series of fresh walkouts have been announced by the united as the bitter dispute over of

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