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tv   Headliners Replay  GB News  January 22, 2023 5:00am-6:01am GMT

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good evening. i'm tatiana sanchez in the gb newsroom labour's calling for an investigation after the bbc chairman helped boris johnson secure a loan up to £800,000 weeks before he was put forward for job. a warning the following contains flashing images the party has written to the parliamentary commissioner for standards following a report , standards following a report, sharp helped arrange a loan for the then prime minister. according to the sunday times , according to the sunday times, sharp introduced multi—million canadian businessmen, some blithe, who allegedly offered act as mr. johnson's guarantor to the cabinet secretary shortly before he was recommended by the government for the role of bbc . government for the role of bbc. a spokesperson the former prime
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minister has dismissed the report as rubbish for a chancellor. nadhim zahawi has sought address questions over his tax affairs. following reports he paid a penalty as part of a multi million pound tax settlement and statement the conservative party chairman said the hmrc accepted he made a careless but not deliberate error in relation to the sale of shares in yougov. that's the polling company he founded . mr. polling company he founded. mr. zahawi has been under pressure following claims he tried to avoid paying tax and labour have said his position is untenable . said his position is untenable. stagecoach founder dame and has strongly disputed what she calls malicious allegations made against her after being charged with human trafficking offences. police scotland says three other people understood to be members of her family were also charged on thursday in connection with alleged immigration offences. ms. globe denies the allegations made against her her family. peru has closed its famous
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tourist site, machu pecha indefinitely following nationwide protests. people across peru have been taking in violent anti—government , which violent anti—government, which have killed dozens people over the past few weeks. in the caphal the past few weeks. in the capital, lima, police officers used tear gas to try to control throwing glass bottles . stones. throwing glass bottles. stones. protests began after the previous leader of peru is ousted and backing palace has revealed details for the plan of the king's coronation weekend . the king's coronation weekend. the sixth to the 8th of may. the palace , the coronation of the palace, the coronation of the king and consort will take place at westminster abbey on saturday, followed by a balcony appearance joined by other members of the royal family . a members of the royal family. a concert will be held at windsor castle on the sunday. thousands of events are expected to place all over the uk over weekend with a bank holiday declared for monday . tv online and dab+ radio monday. tv online and dab+ radio this is gb news. now it's over.
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the headliners headliners . the headliners headliners. hello, i'm leo kearse and welcome to headliners. joining to inject some levity to saturday's headlines are diane spence , sir, and dan o'reilly . spence, sir, and dan o'reilly. dapper laughs. spence, sir, and dan o'reilly. dapper laughs . first ladies get dapper laughs. first ladies get acquainted with sunday's front pages and we start with the sunday telegraph . it has sunday telegraph. it has refugees and any chance at the heart of a diverse coronation will hopefully see ngozi fulani an appearance of that for maximum diversity as fred flintstone again. the observer has zahawi fighting for his political life , admitting a tax political life, admitting a tax error. we all make a few mistakes list with 3.7 billion between 4 million between friends. anyway, the sunday mirror has that harry prince harry spun . a tale over his harry spun. a tale over his tailspin . some allies detected
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tailspin. some allies detected there. apparently the sunday times has is it's the first world war. if we kill them, they're just replaced . i think they're just replaced. i think they're just replaced. i think they're talking about the ukraine ukraine war. they're the sunday express has the king wants coronation bring joy was what else would he wanted to bnng what else would he wanted to bring misery. the sun star has it's the way the cookie crumbles . those were your front pages . . those were your front pages. let's look at those front pages. we begin with the observer then. i think with all fight for his political life after admitting tax error. and let's all remember it was careless not deliberate . guys great point and deliberate. guys great point and million pounds. what are you talking about .7 so i'm trying to talking about? so i'm trying to wrap my head around this essentially . so how we essentially. so how we co—founded the polling yougov and he never owned shares however 42.5% of that company
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shares were held by baltimore. i believe called balshaw investments , which is, you know, investments, which is, you know, obviously in gibraltar, because that's not ever a red flag that says tax evasion here. you know, you might as well just investigate everything that's lodged in gibraltar and people who in a think tank called , tax who in a think tank called, tax policy associates estimate he may have avoided . policy associates estimate he may have avoided . £3.7 million may have avoided. £3.7 million in capital. capital gains tax. now you see the hallways saying, no, no, no, no, no, no, no , i no, no, no, no, no, no, no, i have i'm not a beneficiary of financial investments . but they financial investments. but they is run by his parents. well yeah but those his parents what is he the hook for tax if it's i am not sure like it's it all seems very and he's made this very worded statement where he doesn't admit that there has been an error. doesn't admit that there has been an error . they're sort of been an error. they're sort of saying that was a careless . but
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saying that was a careless. but it's just a bit murky. it has paid them a lot of money, a multimillion saying some. yeah, that's i mean, that's incredible. done. i can understand , you know, a comedian understand, you know, a comedian or a plumber or someone doing their self—assessment, a of them are doing it right now. i can understand standing. yeah. making a small error, maybe forgetting know 60 the forgetting you know 60 quid the stuff there in the back of cage but mean this is the but i mean this is the chancellor of the exchequer and before he worked finance before that he worked in finance and no doubt he's got and i know of no doubt he's got accountants. be accountants. so how can be making these cause making these errors? cause trying the money trying to nick the money basically the money. and basically nick the money. and he looked, i thought cbo study they don't the taxes they going don't pay the taxes they going i'm mean i'd never i'm celebrity i mean i'd never wanted a politician in wanted to be a politician in life but now i'm looking this life but now i'm looking at this stuff. it looks stuff. i'm thinking it looks like fun and you might like he's good fun and you might look like you said, he's got loads of people that are going to and advising to be helping him and advising him the most the thing we him and the most the thing we most scrutinises them paying most scrutinises be them paying their do their taxes and what they do with their money. so for him to make an error means was make an error means he was trying something wrong. trying to do something wrong. that's saying right. that's why i'm saying right. yeah. you'll be
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yeah. so, yeah, you'll be heanng yeah. so, yeah, you'll be hearing from team hearing from his legal team shortly. not allowed to shortly. oh i'm not allowed to say it like that. oh, did it. and moving onto the front the and moving onto the front of the telegraph sun. yes so refugees and, the nhs are at the heart of the diverse coronation. so king charles is to put refugee in the nhs to be a focal point for free day celebration designed reflect a modern multi britain, a coronation choir made up of jazz singers is going to represent the voices and the faces there's going to be lgbtq groups, deaf singers . everyone is going to be lgbtq groups, deaf singers. everyone is going to be there. it's going to be fun to sign up of is really a support group. yes the deaf singers all different keys. they must be. yeah i'm dyslexic people who can't read will hopefully be represented there as well. but. but yeah, basically put it this way everyone's going it's going to be a great party and it's going to represent how wonderful and beautiful the uk is right now. yeah and are you looking
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forward to this ? i mean, it's forward to this? i mean, it's going to be sort of the olympics, mark too, which is what they're sort of touting it as. i don't know if they're going to get danny boyle in, but involved. i mean, it says involved. i mean, when it says ref you, jeez, i can understand the nhs. the refugees the nhs. yeah, the refugees thing little strange to the nhs. yeah, the refugees thingespecially little strange to the nhs. yeah, the refugees thingespecially because ange to the nhs. yeah, the refugees thingespecially because thee to the nhs. yeah, the refugees thingespecially because the royal me, especially because the royal family habit of doing on family have a habit of doing on boats. might . family have a habit of doing on boats. might. i'm family have a habit of doing on boats. might . i'm just boats. you might. i'm just a little bit worried about refugee element they're going do element if they're going to do something boats, you think something on boats, do you think they're to have migrants they're going to have a migrants floating thames , going to floating up the thames, going to happy york ? and i wonder if happy new york? and i wonder if you'll be letting into into some of his palaces houses clarence room you know he's got room in a couple of ukrainian refuges as well. he could probably house some. yeah. he's the couple. yeah there's some for prince charles king. prince charles to think it. i can't i can't get past colin and charles. i'm a conservative. it's only change anyway. look the front cover of the marathon. yes, well, two things, drew. my number one,
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beyonce versus the battle of the divas . sorry, but beyonce versus the battle of the divas. sorry, but madonna has been around for so long. can you really step to the plate? but it's beyonce . who knows? but the it's beyonce. who knows? but the other thing we're going to look at is harry, a tale of a tailspin . so you're not going to tailspin. so you're not going to believe this, but it appears that some recollections may vary . where have we heard that before in harry's book? spare . before in harry's book? spare. change harry is saying he details being trained to be an apache helicopter pilot. and he says i felt left wing deep sickening feeling of disorder. and then he says was this an aborted suicide attempt ? i mean aborted suicide attempt? i mean , mate, that's not what you want to think when you're being trained. how to fly an apache helicopter that you instructor is so by your presence he's decided to end it all. i mean, that's how i felt when i was watching the netflix thing. i feel halfway through. i'm just going to top myself. i can't watch the rest of this suck. but
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the helicopter pilot joking aside, the helicopter pilot said that's not happened . right. that's not what happened. right. yeah. so harry, the helicopter pilot actually said that we go through the manoeuvres, all the little stunts , things we'll be little stunts, things we'll be doing beforehand. yeah he would. and harry just up for the for the book to make himself a bit. a bit braver. yeah well, you know what it's like. he's admitted to doing drugs when you when you do cocaine, the stories come flying out. and i so, you know, we've all been in kitchen and helicopter stories as and told helicopter stories as well . i and told helicopter stories as well. i mean, this could just be his own person truth because they don't seem harry and meghan they don't seem harry and meghan they don't seem focussed on telling truth. they just telling actual truth. they just want own personal. want to tell their own personal. it's the best ever to sell it's just the best ever to sell a book hasn't been gone on for months is brilliant. yes on the cover of every single newspaper seems to it seems to be seems to me it seems to be working. at first sales of working. at first they sales of 400,000. wow if you're nadine zahavi can calculate the zahavi you can calculate the taxes but i mean was a cross it was a cross like kindle and
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across e—books and things like that. we still don't like them on spotify. when you say that personal account, do you mean like a very over emotional telling of factual events? because that everything seems to be like in fused with this like sack ring kind of. it's so over the top, it's so i felt every moment when i was in the apache, it's like good mate. the other people were training well and they would go, oh, what's that button do? like, everything seems to be emotionally charged for harry. yeah, yeah, yeah. it i mean, could be, could be, is, goes for jazeera up i mean, could be, could be, is, goes forjazeera up general i mean not that he actually sat there and done it, they probably said that was great the helicopter thing but less let's i get feeling from the i get a feeling from the excerpts of read from book excerpts of read from this book which have been paid for which have all been paid for anything it's all been in newspapers the whole thing and various newspapers if you cobble together the stories but it seems like the ghost—writer is on commission . he's getting he's on commission. he's getting he's getting a of each book. so getting a cut of each book. so he must he is really over egging
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it . i mean even the bit him it. i mean even the bit him rubbing . elizabeth arden cream rubbing. elizabeth arden cream on his penis and it reminded him of his mom i mean he didn't know urdu for his for the audio book as well i mean that i'm glad it reminded him of his mum and not anyone else in his humble belief that there you can fill the gaps as you can do with that cream as and we finish with star then. yes. so generation see a ditch their biscuits for some moses that compass apparently the way the so the new generation eat apparently it's also they don't want to sit down for a three square meals a day so they're having sort of large healthy snacks more savoury snacks and it means you know, the tradition of sort of when you have a little break having a nice little break having a nice little custard cream or a borbon i what's your favourite i don't what's your favourite with cup of tea. it's going with your cup of tea. it's going out the window. the younger generation because they're not to a lunch they'll have to have a big lunch they'll have a bigger snack and a slightly bigger snack and they'll go something they'll go for something savoury. cases on
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savoury. so some cases are on the are some moses are the up. there are some moses are actually they actually healthy. i mean they seem fried. they don't seem seem deep fried. they don't seem this all pastry i must admit whenever guess most of the whenever i guess most of the baguettes sort of the baguettes in it's sort of the very greasy bag. i mean i'd love some think any food can turn some i think any food can turn people through probably . some i think any food can turn people through probably. isn't a health no, but i love health food. no, but i love some. i can eat them all day long. not sure of what they long. i'm not sure of what they for take i do take my for me. my take i do take my toast in my tea, though i know that your though just that on your taste though just butter and dip in the tea a lot up. i wouldn't do that, but i'm a fan of symbiosis just so you. right? well you like to make the most of it anyway. that's it for part one. coming up in the second section, we're with gas with russian spies and transgender athletes. we'll you in a couple of minutes.
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welcome back to headline with me in leo kearse. i'm joined by two very talented and very well dressed comedians, dan spencer and dan o'reilly, dapper laughs. anyway, the observer renault and an mi5 refuse to investigate russia trying to buy influence in the tory party, possibly because the investigation would just contain a series of progressively smaller scandals. then you've got this one. yeah, it's out of a bond movie here. the mi5 refuses to investigate russian spy links to the tory spies whistleblower and mi5 refused to investigate evidence that allegedly linked the russian spies with attempts attempting to influence a conservative politician's basic the russians they're saying that the russians they're saying that the russians they're saying that the russians have got in the putting money into the tories and stuff that and yet they don't want investigate and he's just worrying that you know the russians were going to newcastle something to destroy the country they didn't need to do that. all
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ineeded they didn't need to do that. all i needed to was give some money to and the tories are to the tories and the tories are doing it something that we all but now and my five and five refused to look into it which me think that probably nothing think that is probably nothing that otherwise it's that is in it. otherwise it's kind their look into kind of their to job look into this for possibly they've this stuff for possibly they've given another given money to my faith. another of it, i don't know. of looking at it, i don't know. yeah, yeah it's not really a bond film like what? the spy who ignored. yeah yeah, actually the plot, the film be rubbish and shady. but yeah this absolutely does nothing . and unfortunately does nothing. and unfortunately the person who to report the person who went to report this that got a man called, sergei kristo, he's a conservative party activist and a former journalist with bbc world. actually leaked it to world. he actually leaked it to the guardian, but he only to the guardian went mi5 guardian because he went to mi5 and he said, look, there was this russian diplomat who sergei nello bin who since then has been by way expelled from estonia on. espionage charges. we've fallen out of a window here in moscow . no, no. do you here in moscow. no, no. do you know what this window is that they fell out of in moscow and also there is a car in kingston.
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the russian people tend to fall off as well . no, i know you have off as well. no, i know you have to have an umbrella when you walk under that one, but so he was offering sort give money to the conservatives and. then they could make introductions to russian companies and rest russian companies and the rest of it . and so he went to mi5 and of it. and so he went to mi5 and he said, this is happening. and first there was a junior first of all, there was a junior agent went to and he was agent who went to and he was like, okay, that's not good . like, okay, that's not good. then this guy, christo, then wrote, so the head of mi5 and your bond film m like literally wrote to m saying, look, there's an issue and then they had a meeting. i said, look, chris they said, want me to wear they said, you want me to wear a wire when? go meet this guy wire when? i go meet this guy and mi5 went, nah, and then mi5 just went, nah, just don't talk him. it's like this. that's not even gossip . this. that's not even gossip. that's like that's not spying that's not big. that's nothing. it's like that to me is so wrong that mi5 did that right. it's like that to me is so wrong that mi5 did that right . do it's like that to me is so wrong that mi5 did that right. do you think mi5 should have been straight in there with the undercover? i mean, i thought there was a lot of foreign influence, a lot of foreign money politics and the left
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money in politics and the left have come out. the labour party have come out. the labour party have come out. the labour party have come and said this needs to be is this be investigated. this is this a scandal. i corbyn went scandal. but i mean, corbyn went on, cycling holidays, on, you know, cycling holidays, the union and he's taken the soviet union and he's taken money, he's taken money from iran. but i know to tar the whole labour party with somebody they've expelled . yeah, well i they've expelled. yeah, well i mean there is, there is money. i mean there is, there is money. i mean i think it's a it's an open secret. there's sloshing around in politics that isn't always from the from the finest sources with the finest of intentions . with the finest of intentions. yeah totally. and when you have somebody who's trying to raise flags you have to ask the question , did mi5 not respond. question, did mi5 not respond. yeah maybe they're maybe they're on strike as maybe it's the next wave of , say, airstrikes. i mean wave of, say, airstrikes. i mean , not even trying to find out the gossip like. my mum would have a betterjob than have done a betterjob than this. he went to my mum and said that guy, we think he's a bit dodgy like. right. next to dodgy like. right. i sat next to him. have got his whole him. she'd have got his whole life in an hour, life story in about an hour, right. need to get your right. so we need to get your mum and my faith. that's that's
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what i've learnt. anyway, the sunday telegraph now has a revelation will shock revelation that will shock anyone had to deal with anyone who's had to deal with the sector. apparently the public sector. apparently the public sector. apparently the feeling because of the nhs is feeling because of pointless, endless bureaucracy . pointless, endless bureaucracy. you are going to believe you are not going to believe this. so the telegraph say doctor caldwell says the horribly inefficient around patients is moving in and out of the wards. it's the nhs delays . the wards. it's the nhs delays. so doctor gold caldwell who is now retired he used to be a diabetes and endocrinology consultant he has this campaign and what he does he takes photographs of the amount of paperwork he has to fill in next to himself to sort of demonstrate because he's not a short man, he's five foot ten. so sort of takes photographs of himself next to all these bits of paper to say this , how much of paper to say this, how much we have to fill in and is coming at a time when . obviously, the at a time when. obviously, the we have massive delays in getting people out and into hospital . so the latest figures
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hospital. so the latest figures show almost six in ten patients who were well enough to be discharged were stuck . so these discharged were stuck. so these are patients who are well enough . go home. yeah, 60% of patients in the hospitals are well enough to be discharged and go home. but but they're not because this paperwork because of their because just bureaucratic logjams because what happens is that they have an issue come up like i mean he says you know we don't want anybody to have complications but what they do is they invent a new instead of kind of putting complication in with an existing form to streamline the process, they just generate a new form. and this is kind of an example of just too much paperwork. and, you know, how they think, oh, we're in nhs we're digitising in the nhs that'll help it's not because it means you've just got of means you've just got a of doctors filling the same doctors filling in the same paperwork on a computer now right right there's systems that talk to each other so it's recreate that the paper forms in a digital sense instead of this you know smooth smooth system
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everything's integrated and i mean it's like, you know, when they when they have a new condition or something that they need to record instead of adding it to the to the form like you suggest, you've got to fill the name the nhs number, the address, all those details and get and the get it back. and then the condition which obviously condition which must obviously do knots. i mean, do people's knots. and i mean, they apparently a few years they say apparently a few years ago estimates ago their estimates the estimates nurses were estimates the nurses were spending 50% of their time doing paperwork which sounds ridiculously it is, and ridiculously high as it is, and now it's closer to 70, which doesn't leave much time left for a rolling people over and giving them a white database . you just them a white database. you just give them that badge and that gun and them outside, you know, let them do their job. yeah this nurses so nurses in least doesn't it as well. yeah done . doesn't it as well. yeah done. do you think of this. well i've been up to the hospital recently with my children and it is ridiculous. the amount of paperwork . the thing is, they're paperwork. the thing is, they're so worried about what getting things wrong that you've to literally answer loads and loads and loads and loads stuff
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and loads and loads of stuff once you're in then they want to let go until you've answered let you go until you've answered loads, loads more stuff. so it's a massive waste, it's a massive massive waste, it's all massive backlog. don't all a massive backlog. i don't know, when you're know, you know, when you're saying spend 50% of saying that nurses spend 50% of their of their time on paperwork, you think to yourself, should yourself, well maybe they should be for them. be people doing that for them. but got loads of but i've already got loads of people you know, people in there. you know, you're quality you're a quality staff, diversity even people diversity staff, even got people working in the car parks. i mean, it's all money gone down the drain. looks like it's the drain. it looks like it's just mess. yeah. doesn't it? just a mess. yeah. doesn't it? sounds absolute mess. sounds like an absolute mess. spending their time doing spending 70% of their time doing paperwork? that is an absolute nonsense. more nonsense. anyway, more public sector potential mayhem . now sector potential mayhem. now the independent reporting independent is reporting on the latest intervention latest nanny state intervention . you know, you're cooking with gas, you shouldn't be gas, but you shouldn't be because government is coming because the government is coming for a gas stove. stunts yeah, cooking gas is worse for cooking with gas is worse for health living in a polluted health than living in a polluted city. according new research city. according to new research said gas stoves produce nitrogen dioxide and it's dangerous. it's more dangerous than toxins found in traffic fumes , irritates the in traffic fumes, irritates the lungs, gets into the bloodstream
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. so we've got to pay a full team for our gas and then it's going to kill all that basic. that's basically what his story is about, what they've done. they were doing research and they got some children to wear. the special pollution monitors on backpack . right? right. on their backpack. right? right. so to in different areas, to see what the pollution was like and what the pollution was like and what they found was they were going out, walking around where they were meant to be registering the pollution. but when to the house to when i come back to the house to sit to have dinner, it was sit to have their dinner, it was actually their that actually their mum that was causing most pollution, causing the most pollution, cooking their food. and that's how thing out. so how work this thing out. so which horrendous. can you which is horrendous. can you imagine child made the imagine the child that made the mistake mum, your food the mistake say mum, your food the most polluting thing of my whole day. that is a clip around the right there. i think so . yeah. right there. i think so. yeah. so that's that that's so that's that's that that's story. so yeah it's just seems like everything at the moment is to kill you. yeah. do you think the sort of talk this of. the sort of talk this up is of. no, know it's become the new no, you know it's become the new thing new face thing has become the new face mask, like gas stoves, everything goes to school, get
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rid of uk store. but i like cooking and gas because in cooking and gas because it in response away. not response straight away. it's not like of those rings that like one of those rings that turns the of 45 turns red over the course of 45 minutes. yeah can finally finally muster enough heat finally maybe muster enough heat to cook and going all right. i mean i mind that i mean i'm happy to stand there for 45 minutes. so i wonder whether is something to do with russia. i do wonder that because obviously we get 4% of our gas. well, we got in 2021, we got 4% of our gas was imported from russia. and i wonder whether this is part of the whole kind of overarching net zero thing where now we've got this bad about the gas stoves coming out and. so it's another way of shaping populations because if they bnng populations because if they bring this out, then they can get some heat behind it. then they can say right now , no gas, they can say right now, no gas, nobody can have gas because they're dangerous for pollutants . right. and there is actual scientific evidence unlike scientific evidence here, unlike city khan, the lying sheriff of london and his manipulation , the london and his manipulation, the ulez information just had to get
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that in. i don't like. and so russia should have been should have been bribing british gas and some who put backpacks on children . yes that's still a children. yes that's still a politician. i do know. i don't like actually moving an electric all electric system because know if there's a power cut. you can't you can't cook an egg, you're never going to able to light a cigar from an electric stovetop. anyway sun mirror now and some good news for women like diane , thanks so . light like me, diane, thanks so. light is transgender athletes to be allowed to compete . women in new allowed to compete. women in new world rules . so sports chiefs world rules. so sports chiefs are all now having to come up with sort of their stance on the trans athlete and where they fit into their existing category and world athletics have been doing consultation and this is a confidential which has been leaked out. so let us just underline that this is not what they're going to set in stone, but this is what they've been chatting about and they have
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decided that they are going to tighten the regulations on trans athletes in that they're going to reduce amount of testosterone that you can have have in your bloodstream to sort so half and they're going to women level two and then the length of time you need to have that lowered measure on and that's what they're saying so that's what they're saying so that's what they're thinking about at the moment because they also want to take into account athlete who have different sets of have got different sets of sexual development , such as sexual development, such as people like caster semenya. so caster semenya , a woman, she's caster semenya, a woman, she's just a woman who has been born with a i don't know exactly what her thing is, but i know that she is a very powerful woman with a lot of testosterone. she is she's through a genetic genetic difference. yeah she produced more testosterone than your average sheila. so yeah. so
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she stayed good at sports was really good at running scientific we have it yeah yeah yeah yeah and so that's what's happening but of course this is relevant because there are lots of different sports who have decided to take a different road . for example, i think it's the triathlon that have just changed the name of the men's category to open. so anybody compete in category. so yeah it's what do you think of this. i mean doesn't there isn't there risk that women's sports, if transgender men are able to compete in them to and be a trans transgender women able to compete in them and to be a transgender woman, you just need to say i'm a woman. and, you know, for example, know, scotland, for example, isn't that it would isn't the risk that it would just become a sort of retirement community for mediocre athletes. i'm terrified to even talk i'm just terrified to even talk about absolute it's about this is absolute it's mental, isn't it? my thinking is and this might just be a really simple and a dumb way of putting it. why the first place it. but why in the first place would have put and would they have put men and women separately in these things to compete if they didn't think
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that there was a difference? in fairness? and i'm not. fairness? yeah, and i'm not. look if if they let this look if they if they let this happen across the board, not looking forward to the boxing because mean, it's going because gina, i mean, it's going to in bad way. it's to kick off in a bad way. it's already happened. there's a fox fall in fox and mami fighter shattered. it's a transgender or enemy fighter , a women's orbital enemy fighter, a women's orbital bone interface for fighting and the women wombs, they should never have been punched like that. she'd never felt force strength like that . you know, strength like that. you know, all of us are going through male puberty, gives athletes , puberty, gives athletes, fighters certain benefits. you you get bigger bones, greater bone density , strength. it's bone density, strength. it's easier to parallel park the stadium. there's lots 0 but it's not just but it's interesting it's not about testosterone but that's what they seem to be taking it to right testosterone in the amount of testosterone the time that you're on it. but there other factors which this
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consultation doesn't consider but it's not in stone yet. well, the development of your body , the development of your body, the development of your body, the why don't they just have like a trans division or like a non—binary or whatever the brit awards that were great anyways to the male now and a recent surge in a medical condition has experts concerned that it's being overdiagnosed . we're not being overdiagnosed. we're not talking about transgender children . this is adhd. then children. this is adhd. then yeah. is adhd being overdiagnosed or has it just been neglected for years? top experts in on the debate as it ever garnered catalogue of celebrities share their with the crippling mental disorder. mental health experts believe knock on effects of covid and the and the lockdown may be to others credit others the never ending rate celebrities milking it and publicly revealing their battle with the disorder . and battle with the disorder. and i'd just like to say i'm one of them. celebrities or z listers or social media people. the eyes been talking about my journey into finding out about online.
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so you know what i've told my kids up to that, but they're out there saying, you know, is this a trend or is or is that a surge of adhd? and i it's a little bit of adhd? and i it's a little bit of both, to be completely honest with ya. i didn't know i'd adhd . everyone else around me seemed to but i didn't. to it out, but i didn't. i didn't really know what was going inside mind , not going on inside my mind, not being at a focus on things and stuff i saw content stuff like that. i saw content about online saw a lot about it online and i saw a lot of tiktoks talks and stuff, lots of tiktoks talks and stuff, lots of views, and i thought i'd get them no, so take talks and them no, so, so take talks and stuff. just, just of stuff. just, just sort of describe been it can feel to describe been how it can feel to have stuff like and have adhd, stuff like that. and i them went and got i relate to them went and got seen by specialist and she seen by a specialist and she said was a complete nutcase. said i was a complete nutcase. so it worked technically what she how much you this she said how much did you this guy what would be paying attention? to be honest with you, i was in a poor cabin pub car park. it's a lot like you get diagnosed with this thing . get diagnosed with this thing. people i know people who've people are i know people who've been adhd and it seems been diagnosed adhd and it seems been diagnosed adhd and it seems be all right. you know, we're comedians. know, think comedians. you know, i think most comedians got adhd. that's why we're comedians instead
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having job. but in a having a properjob. but in a lot of cases you pay 600 quid for a private diagnosis, then get free nhs grade speed on the nhs is the longest you've won. that seems to be the. yeah, but when you've got proper adhd , the when you've got proper adhd, the speeds it doesn't help speeds really it doesn't help you just mellow out no you. just kind of mellow out no good. you. just kind of mellow out no good . yeah, it's although it is good. yeah, it's although it is i think it to do my return so i was away as like nothing that i was away as like nothing that i was having trouble with his because he overdosed it but i yeahi because he overdosed it but i yeah i but one thing that could be interesting that because obviously it was only looked at as something that adults could have since 2008. so obviously that's been an increase in the aduu that's been an increase in the adult psychiatrist like say oh no , it can happen. and also no, it can happen. and also apparently develops differently in men and women. it comes out. you have a different way of expressing your adhd with the different genders and on one handifs different genders and on one hand it's great that there's so much more out there because you
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said there's a lot of information . you can look at it information. you can look at it and you can you can also help via the media of youtube. but the other issue is, is there's a lot of people who are self—diagnose saying and i'm like, no she's just late and she's a pain. and when i to have a coffee with her, she to turn up and not tell me i—spy adhd. no, you like just it as an excuse ? yeah. there we go. excuse? yeah. there we go. anyway, that's for part two. coming up in part three, we're going to discuss a conspiracy theory, school , the importance theory, school, the importance of learning to read a map and deer carcases . see, had a couple deer carcases. see, had a couple of minutes. don't go with .
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welcome back to headliners we've got the sunday times now reporting on a school that
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actually liked to send my kids to dance. oh my gosh. so hope sussex school, trenton's generation of conspiracy theorists. that's the headline so this is very interesting this is now you can't say it's a school and they describe as a home education hub. and the reason is that they are not registered with the department of education and ofsted is investigating hope sussex because they haven't registered with the department education and. they have a telegram channel which is your first big red flag . if your school has red flag. if your school has a telegram channel and they have cool subjects including , cool subjects including, survivalism, foraging welding and shambolic practises and, they teach their through the of conspiracy . so for example in conspiracy. so for example in a recent history lesson they were taught , the us government knew taught, the us government knew in advance of the 911 attacks
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and they discussed the possibility that the stars were not and were in lights . that's not and were in lights. that's whole . so the school built this whole. so the school built this school was started by say this single and her husband matthew who were expelled from the british national party . in 2009 british national party. in 2009 for leaking the names and details of thousands of party members online. after internal dispute. now, i'm sorry but would you really trust your children be educated by people who if they have a disagreement with the group therein. they are willing to the details of houses of members online do . you not of members online do. you not think that's a little bit of an unstable of people to be educating children? i think with the whole thing about sending your kids school these days as you're here, you're going get some blue here, gender ideologist is going to pounce on kid if he picks pounce on your kid if he picks up a barbie and send him to the tavistock, the get speared tavistock, the kids get speared anyway. like the this
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anyway. isn't this like the this is the exact extreme opposite, though, because they're sort of teaching about anti—vax. they're teaching about anti—vax. they're teaching about anti—vax. they're teaching about sorts of teaching about all sorts of things. they're saying that pill harbour was known about before the attack happened. yeah then i mean, this just seems like basic facts. i thought, yeah, that's what i was going to say. i probably wouldn't have bunked off if i went to this school all over the state, over the patent law. you know what, this is law. and you know what, this is quality. this is good for me. it's good for adhd. what's going on? mean, half on? but i mean, half the conspiracy, the conspiracy conspiracy, half the conspiracy theory conspiracy theory is that conspiracy theories that were conspiracy theories that were conspiracy theories a year and a half ago, two years ago. all facts now. and anyway, so it seems to be all the that i read that all the stuff that i read that was pretty weird. but now it sounds like a bunch of teaching. teaching bunch kids yeah. teaching a bunch of kids yeah. yeah. it's yeah. although, although it's good so are good to. see? so pupils are given in, survivalism given lessons in, survivalism foraging, and shamanic foraging, welding and shamanic practises which sounds practises which actually sounds really useful. yeah, in central london. all right, stars. you know, don't believe the stars know, i don't believe the stars are lights . maybe the space are lights. maybe the space
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isn't just a black cloth with a few. yeah, yeah, three lights. and, you know, that's going to a bit far. but this this sort of welding mean this is i wish i'd learned that at school. you know what i was thinking about this the they really need the other day. they really need to going teach kids to you're going to teach kids maths 18. just don't teach maths until 18. just don't teach math. return. oh math. do that tax return. oh yeah. teach them to, like, change the fuse in a plug for something useful i don't something useful in. i don't i can understand the practicality this i don't like it when this but i don't like it when people focus on survivalism because that suggests me that they're not focusing on to continue society says that they've already given up and they're like now the apocalypse coming. so learn how to skin a rabbit . you've seen the writing rabbit. you've seen the writing on the wall anyway , the manual on the wall anyway, the manual now, and this story , people now, and this story, people suffering on antidepressants cheered me up then. really coming off antidepressant can be a terrifying prospect for many struggling with their mental health, according to the latest available statistics, more than 8 million people in the uk are prescribed antidepressant to
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help cope with depression or anxiety. psychologists at both university and are working to improve help for people withdrawing from antidepressants and are recruiting volunteers to do a new study. anti depressants withdrawal is hugely important and very understudied, so they've given loads people into they've given loads people into the presence of doctors , given the presence of doctors, given them all. and i don't know what's going to happen when you come off a. my thinking is you're probably going to end up depressed again when you come them. know of other them. so you know of other things are probably a side like there's the zaps they're called so when you move your head it's like a zapping feeling in your but to me it's really worrying that they haven't done a lot of research into and there's so many millions and millions of people on these anti—depressants now they're going to more now they're going to get more people them and then people to go on them and then see they are. come off see how they are. they come off of so i'm going study of them. so i'm going to study they're going study more. they're going to study more. i don't they're putting don't think they're putting people antidepressant. it's people on antidepressant. it's just they're just to do studies. but they're going people who have going to study people who have been prescribed but
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been prescribed them. but it sounds sounds me like more sounds it sounds to me like more work the nhs, which is work for the nhs, which is fantastic, forms to fill fantastic, more forms to fill in, might some in, which might depress some people. apparently this isn't people. i apparently this isn't in this article, but thirds in this article, but two thirds of antidepressants of the people on antidepressants are yeah we have a lot are women. so yeah we have a lot of deal with mainly because we're just fed up of like giving away all our sports , you know . away all our sports, you know. so, i mean these are these are called selective serotonin reuptake inhibitors , reuptake inhibitors, essentially, these antidepressants are because the person's brain , like once the person's brain, like once the serotonin is delivered , a serotonin is delivered, a message then gets reabsorbed and it's like, so you lose that that natural happiness. it's like, so you lose that that natural happiness . so these natural happiness. so these drugs sort of stop the brain from doing that and they allow the person whose brain does that to sort continue and not not be too sad but what is what is very interesting is that so this is bath university and they are currently looking for people who want off and depressants want to come off and depressants and they must have support and they must have the support their gp's. if you're their gp's. so if you're thinking contacting bath university and getting involved in this because they do need
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people the the study people for for the the study might talk your gp apparently another thing this is a good time to do it because when people come off their antidepressants one person did say to me they try to get people to do it in this summer months when people are happier. yeah yeah yeah sunny it's warm and you feel generally a bit better. yeah. yeah. so it's good time. interesting. anyway, the sun telegraph now is reporting on a popular font that's discriminating against people who know. so the telegraph goes with the headline not our type whole office regards times new roman font has a list. whole office regards times new roman font has a list . now whole office regards times new roman font has a list. now i do find that slightly sensational headline, but i love the fact they did put it out in time's new and so essentially the home office has said times new roman because it is a serif font which that it has sort of the lovely little curly bits on the edges of the it means that for some
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people this could be harder to read some people do argue conversely that the lovely curly bits help you to sort string the words together in your mind . but words together in your mind. but the issue i have is this is the home office , and if there is an home office, and if there is an emergency i would like everybody to be able to read the document quickly , i would prefer it if quickly, i would prefer it if there weren't too many words in there weren't too many words in the document. but if it's like a nuclear attack or something, i want people to be able to literally open it says press button one and they know what to do. i would like the person who's in charge that button who's in charge of that button to able to read time's new to be able to read time's new room. yeah . go home room. yeah, yeah. go to the home office . yeah. no, i mean, i must office. yeah. no, i mean, i must admit, i'd be really aghast if, like, the home office were using , is the just the big , then this is the just the big step and the general rush towards dumbing everything down. so it will eventually be in purple comics like a, like a or sheet that's been stuck to the pansh sheet that's been stuck to the parish hall noticeboard it's
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just that they need everybody be able to read the document and apparently it's a bit difficult for some people with this i think and people who have like visual issues if you've got any. not really. i'll just think it's that i spend so much time on this stuff, like when everything else going country, else is going on this country, that might be other things that there might be other things them to do. but yeah, yeah. and i we lost that council in i think we lost that council in words. i'm from state. oh, words. now i'm from state. oh, never mind language anyway to the mail now and scientists have suggested a novel cure for dementia getting lost yes no map reading uses your navigational and memory could show the way to beat dementia turning off your gps and using traditional maps in instead could help could help fight dementia basically . it fight dementia basically. it says that when you're orientated using your brain to work these things out and navigational skills and movement and memory it helps prevent cognitive decline. and i've done a lot of
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research into this. so basically they're saying know if you get them to do these things, it might help, but possibly mark my grandad, we lost my grandad to dementia and my partner as well our had it and. it just our grandad had it and. it just seems like a really weird thing do when you when you're dealing with dementia go with someone with dementia to go hey read a map hey i going to read a map because going confuse because it's going to confuse them even more. some like a homing pigeons and try and get home out of the home like bundle them out of the back of transit yeah. back of a transit van. yeah. i mean, three miles. yeah. it's just not it's not really going to if you're the family to be if you're the family of someone suffering with someone that's suffering with dementia comes up dementia and your gp comes up and says, you know what, you want to do this, help give them a or just like we've gone a map orjust be like we've gone on it's just weird. on about it's just seemed weird. yeah. that map is yeah. especially if that map is the to take medication the way to take the medication like this where your pharmacy like this is where your pharmacy is. medication is. where your medication is. it's yeah, mate . it's like, yeah, thanks, mate. really, of put me on really, you kind of put me on a downward there . i mean, downward there. i mean, i understand it, though. well they're trying to say, i think this article is that, you need to keep your brain active and giving yourself like puzzles to solve like spatial puzzles and sort of recognising awareness.
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and i think it's of emphasise that point that we've been told over and again use it or it over and over again use it or it you have to keep your brain as you have to keep your brain as you older. if you just you get older. if you just yourself to sit there and vegetate, your brain will slowly vegetate, your brain will slowly vegetate with you. yeah. watching headlines is a key part of that. anyway coming up and we've got after the break, we've got the fun part, including to be which means after that be happy, which means after that section five to be single for 20 years which we probably don't need. and how you can become a zombie, which we definitely don't anyway, going don't need. anyway, we're going have tomorrow's have a recap of tomorrow's papers well. you a papers as well. we'll you in a couple of minutes. don't go away
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welcome back to headliners. we're going the daily meal now and science is believed that mushrooms could devour from the inside out. sounds likely. science is the belief thing some
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special mushrooms themselves don't. yes so i don't know if you've seen the i've seen this show the last of us right . about show the last of us right. about zombies and that and the daily mail a sign that the infection is zombies are coming we're all going to die. okay if. is zombies are coming we're all going to die. okay if . you're going to die. okay if. you're watching this new series . you watching this new series. you might have thought that it was safe . it was just fictional. but safe. it was just fictional. but there is a parasite that is upon this fungi grows within the host body and it can control your . body and it can control your. all right. this is actually true. there's a fungus that infects ants . let me see what infects ants. let me see what they called the colony . they they called the colony. they crawl they crawl up to the corn and they bite up into and they sprout the fungus, the carpenter. and so it gets inside and it controls the makes them go and it controls the makes them 9° up and it controls the makes them go up and it's a real thing. and they're saying that basically just like coronavirus everything else, could happen the else, this could happen to the human but thank god the human race. but thank god the tories in control. so if it does happen we'd everything happen we'd be so everything ambulances be all right but also we're we're were in the middle
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of obesity epidemic so the of an obesity epidemic so the kids won't be able to climb the trees they might be onto the trees and they might be onto the leaves. and think it's one leaves. and i think it's one better show they won't be better cat show they won't be out it will they. if out to catch it will they. if they get it. yeah. our zombies this is a, this is an idea which has around for a long time has been around for a long time because was an x—files because there was an x—files episode exactly this episode where exactly this happened you had fungus happened where you had a fungus spawn changed the spawn sport like changed the mind of the person and then the spore shot out of people's necks and, and, and it was much more closely to this ant fungus and what's is that one of the doctors that they consult about this they say so could this happen this happen and this quy's happen this happen and this guy's like , no. i mean, it takes guy's like, no. i mean, it takes these things years to evolve. and i'm thinking you said from like years and years and years and years, you know, three years. no, no, no, no, no . all years. no, no, no, no, no. all right. but the point right. millions but the point is, is what he said you know, from it to go from fungus to humans would take forever. and i'm thinking, didn't i'm thinking, yeah, but didn't covid to pretty
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covid go from bats to pretty quick? it did it then we've got to stop. we've got to stop people eating mushrooms. so the trends into the human trends into the into the human food chain and we will go into the meal again. and this time we're reporting on overseas fraudsters technology to fraudsters using technology to clean benefits in britain the most daily meal headline ever seen done. you've got this one. yeah well, this quite yeah well, this is quite interesting. it's almost like a good story, actually . shameless good story, actually. shameless photoshop fails among good story, actually. shameless photoshop fails amon g £8.5 photoshop fails among £8.5 billion of bogus benefit claims . and it's how fraudsters are sending faked images to the department of work and pensions officials to prove they live the uk to keep the money flowing in. so the pandemic lot of so during the pandemic a lot of the were relaxed because a lot of people needed help and so suddenly you have suddenly of course you have a lot bad actors that lot of bad faith actors that suddenly try to pounce on this. but thing, actors, but one thing, just actors, other professions doing it other professions were doing it as . well, happened was as well. well, what happened was the up set up an enhanced the data up set up an enhanced review team, which is pretty nifty and it had a 1000 employees and they managed to stop claims were equivalent to
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£2 billion. so they managed to sort of stop that amount of fraud happening, which is fabulous news that that means for that 2 billion to be caught, there has to be tens, billions going out there. and it annoys me any time i read about benefit fraud in the guardian, they always oh , only point 2% of always say, oh, only point 2% of benefits claimants are fraudulent if it's only 2.2, fraudulent. if it's only 2.2, i must win every single one of them. but i mean, i thought, this is quite a good thing that you they are catching people who are doing fraud . and the best are doing fraud. and the best part is that catching them because they all clearly a little bit stupid they're sending these really badly photoshopped pictures sort of they've got the green door in them all the time , sort of. them all the time, sort of. they've blithely just cut out an image. oh, there's one. there's a picture. so this is who's photoshopped themselves. if you look at a picture of a traditional traditional british house. he seems to be floating in mid—air and that's one reason i didn't know you could get
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photoshop for a gameboy colour. but there we go. is the least convincing what have they blurred trousers that guy standing on top of the car was a lot of face. he sort of the car it's all that one. look at that. that's lovely certainly no shadows . they have no soul shadows. they have no soul stealing money from people . i stealing money from people. i mean, this is this seems this seems a shocking, of course . seems a shocking, of course. yeah. fraud. 8.4 seems a shocking, of course. yeah. fraud. 8. 4 £8.5 billion of yeah. fraud. 8.4 £8.5 billion of bogus this look look listen of i've got a different view on this time's a hard if you can make a couple of quid but doing a bit of in there no you know this even in this country overseas agree me they waste what i call a soft they're not out robbing people all this is a joke i'm joking i'm joking you're terrible. anyway so the sunday times. no. and shared a dating advice show on tv was really good by the way could you help this woman go in the pool.
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no i couldn't. she. she doesn't she seems like she's past help unfortunately and i don't mean to be mean . yeah, no. so, look, to be mean. yeah, no. so, look, she's. she's been dating for 20 years and she's still single . years and she's still single. she says i'm 38 next month. not a particularly significant birthday not a big one at a premium age . oh my, my, my eyes premium age. oh my, my, my eyes have gone . but basically i'll have gone. but basically i'll cut straight to it for years and years and years she's been dating. she's died variety of people and hasn't been able to find the one and it must be a nightmare. well, yeah, i think she's too picky. think that's. i think that's simply where we are. and i just made a little list i narrowed it down a little bit. the different people she dated years, she dated for all these years, she couldn't the perfect match. couldn't find the perfect match. she had a university tutor. but then a cliche then she is a bit of a cliche that he was talking about his work stuff like that i think a welsh up but she didn't like where lived as a war reporter where he lived as a war reporter . ah, but then she got up when he off to war. so know all he went off to war. so know all i'm saying is, you know you can
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be a little bit picky so i'm sorry. you don't see. no, you don't see any being picky. don't see any men being picky. do take anything. so i'm do we take anything. so i'm going a bit from that going to learn a bit from that this year. date advice. be picky. yeah just take what you can get. diane, would you agree 7 can get. diane, would you agree ? this and i don't ? well, i read this and i don't know her very well, but she i mean, living life, i think she talks a lot i could have summarised dating history a bit quicker than that . yeah yeah i quicker than that. yeah yeah i get i mean she seems it i guess the idea is that she's trying to sort of connect with other people and say hey you know we've all got this different idea of what dating is. we've all got this different idea of what dating is . she does idea of what dating is. she does seem to be a little there. why so self—absorbed ? yeah. yeah. so self—absorbed? yeah. yeah. she dated a as well. yeah, i, i was, i was trying to work out who it was . i just couldn't. so who it was. i just couldn't. so is it terrible idea and anyway, here's a reminder. before before we go off air, here's a reminder of the front papers sunday. we begin with the telegraph we've got the sunday telegraph refugees and the nhs at the
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heart of a diverse coronation we've got the observer . heart of a diverse coronation we've got the observer. there's a how we fighting for political life after admitting and are worth possibly £3.7 billion. the current financial there's a lot of money that could be spent on nurses but isn't or will be will be because he's finally coughed it up after the tax office got in a headlock and made him hand it over. we've got the sunday mirror and harry spun a tale over a tailspin. according his former trainer . and we've got former trainer. and we've got the sunday times saying it's like the first world war, if we kill , they're just replaced . kill, they're just replaced. we've got the sunday express with wants coronation to bring joy with wants coronation to bring joy but the sun star with it's the way the cookie crumbles and those are your front pages and that's it for this evening. thanks to my brilliant guest, diane spencer and dan o'reilly handung diane spencer and dan o'reilly handling is tomorrow at 11 handling this is tomorrow at 11 pm. with me leo kearse hosting a game with george harvey and paul cox. and if you're watching this at 5 pm, then please stay
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tuned breakfast show tuned for the breakfast show coming thanks for coming up next. thanks for watching. tomorrow .
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buckingham palace released these details . as for king charles's details. as for king charles's coronation . good morning . it's coronation. good morning. it's 6:00 on sunday, the 22nd of january. this is breakfast on gb news with stephen and ellie. here are our top stories this morning. well, the coronation will feature a full concert and a balcony appearance. the public will also be invited to take part in community volunteering as part of the celebration . as as part of the celebration. as more information is revealed ahead of the historic weekend in may , labour has asked for may, labour has asked for a formal inquiry into boris
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