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tv   Headliners Replay  GB News  February 3, 2023 5:00am-6:01am GMT

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good you're with gb news in moment headlines. but first let's bring you the latest news headlines. and the bank of england has raised its base rate from three and a half % to 4% from three and a half% to 4% a day. it's the 10th increase in a row but inflation is beginning to fall. the bank also the u.k, is set to enter a recession recession this year. but stresses economic downturns should be shorter and less severe than previously expected . the chancellor, jeremy hunt, today supported the bank of england's decision. we recognise it is very difficult for families , businesses up and down families, businesses up and down the when interest rates go up ,
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the when interest rates go up, but much harder for would be if we didn't decisive steps to bnng we didn't decisive steps to bring down inflation and that's why the bank of england is absolutely right to do what they've done today . and we in they've done today. and we in they've done today. and we in the government must make sure we support them by. what i do in the budget to , make sure that we the budget to, make sure that we make easier not harder for make it easier not harder for them to do what we all want to do, which is to halve inflation. the business secretary is urging energy companies to suspend what they're calling the outrageous practise of forcibly install pre—payment energy . earlier off, pre—payment energy. earlier off, germany said it was launching an urgent investigate action into british gas after reports that contractors working for them had been unreasonably forcing the pre—payment metres on customers. the boss of british gas owned a central says he's horrified . central says he's horrified. energy and climate minister stewart has said it's . my stewart has said it's. my brought in all the suppliers
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last to talk about how we better look after vulnerable people because there are clear rules and have obviously not been followed and therefore i need the regulator i need the companies to do the right thing by people who are in the most difficult of and have been treated on this evidence appallingly. treated on this evidence appallingly . lancashire police appallingly. lancashire police say they've now located and have been speaking to a potential new witness. they were looking for the search for nicola bulleit earlier today. they'd released an image , a woman they wanted to an image, a woman they wanted to speak to who was seen in the area where mother of two disappeared. the 45 year old went missing last friday. michaels on the wire while her dog as part of the hunt. divers are still searching the river. wyre rail passenger us will face some travel disruptions tomorrow as fresh strikes by train drivers caused travel all over the country. the rmt and aslef union members walking out in a
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long running dispute over pay jobs and conditions. rail operators are warning disruption to services all day and little to services all day and little to no in some parts of the country . and finally princess of country. and finally princess of wales has been filming a video to promote her campaign for positivity in early life with radio and television personality. roman kemp wrapping up against the cold in a sheep's skin coat and gloves. kate chats to kemp in footage taken in hertfordshire last month. it's part of the princess's shaping up campaign aimed at the importance of early years development in children . the development in children. the film is to be released tomorrow . let's get you up to date on tv, online and dab plus radio with gb news. time now for headunes with gb news. time now for headlines headlines.
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hello, i'm simon , hosting the hello, i'm simon, hosting the headliners next to me . we have a headliners next to me. we have a talented performer and passionate of dogs. that's josh howie and big dog himself. that's nick dixon . so that that's nick dixon. so that should be a bit of a love in tonight. first, let's at friday's front pages before these two get it on daily mail, we start . people simply don't we start. people simply don't vanish into thin air, except they appear to have done just that. the telegraph lockdown to workforce is permanent rumours about who exactly prince harry lost his virginity as well. bizarrely, a guardian have called for tougher windfall tax after shell posts what they describe obscene record profits . the mirror have the story of the footballer greenwood charges mason greenwood charges dropped by his girlfriend the times british gas band from force fitting new metres and a
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photograph there of . the photograph there of. the gentleman who is apparently in charge of the firm that profit from breaking into people's homes and cutting off supply very evil indeed the express fire don't jump joy just yet but slump to end of next year there is rishi sunak looking quite happy that metro power crazy . happy that metro power crazy. it's the final story on the front pages. we will now take a look at them in some more detail . so josh , you will kick it off . so josh, you will kick it off with the guardian . so yeah, the with the guardian. so yeah, the main story they're going with and few other papers of which is calls for tough a windfall tax after shell posts obscene record profits. made profits profits. they have made profits nearl y £40 profits. they have made profits nearly £40 billion this year. now really hard to sort of visualise what, 40.7 i mean, just to give you an idea of it, it's more than all three of our salaries combined. right some
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would be more than tv presenters combined. this is world wide . to combined. this is world wide. to be fair, this is this is worldwide they make about 2 billion from the uk. okay. but still you have the shell's new chief executive is saying these are incredibly times not for them shareholders to be said and them shareholders to be said and the answer to that is continue to make sure that we provide energy to the world and loads of money. he didn't say that. there was a quote that he said to this. are companies where this. these are companies where we are experiencing difficulties as because. sort of as well because. we're a sort of company that has to invest ten or the future. or 15, 20 years into the future. yeah like we're all yeah it's like we're all suffering. we're well, but also there's a threat here. he suffering. we're well, but also the like,| threat here. he suffering. we're well, but also the like, you threat here. he suffering. we're well, but also the like, you know, at here. he suffering. we're well, but also the like, you know, he 1ere. he suffering. we're well, but also the like, you know, he had he suffering. we're well, but also the like, you know, he had to; so, like, you know, he had to make sure the lights are on, which have gone which otherwise would have gone off, i.e. we made loads of money. but it wasn't for us money. but if it wasn't for us you would all be like the alternative. it's not necessarily i mean, you know, there is a tendency to suspect that it's that they are profiteering that profiteering essentially that putin invades ukraine and that they have reached all the benefits. it's a bit more complicated that, to be
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complicated than that, to be fair, think. i don't. fair, i think. is it.7 i don't. what do you think? don't fair, i think. is it? i don't. what do you think? don't know what do you think? i don't know if much more if it's that much more complicated. i mean, is that that's certainly one thing that's certainly one thing that's increase, that's led to the increase, isn't that's it gives me isn't it? so that's it gives me pause because normally i'm against if against all tax, really. but if it's the result, a war which is just another form of messing about, then, then we should do this the it gives this to offset the only it gives me that i'm find myself me pause is that i'm find myself agreeing miliband . ed agreeing with ed miliband. ed davey a rule thumb davey which is a rule of thumb and don't know much about a and i don't know much about a topic. i think just do the opposite or whatever they say. so i'm sure. and so i'm not sure. simon and miliband one of these sort miliband serve one of these sort of landmark proposals was it was about of energy about the profit of energy companies a few years ago, and it crazy then, didn't it? it seemed crazy then, didn't it? does miliband landmark does ed miliband have landmark proposals ? it's one of those proposals? it's one of those ones he ditched into his tombstone, his little tombstone, one of his little ideas april, the, you know, ideas in april, the, you know, everybody's energy bill is going to go up 40. and now that's even costs have gone considerably down since then. yes. two of the things that they were talking about make sense are about which do make sense are one to cut these the tax one is to cut these the tax breaks they get investing in new
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oil and gas fields like they're going to make the profit down the end of that. the idea the end of that. so the idea that we're in some way paying for that and also to back take back those profits the back some of those profits the taxes to 2022 which is when these ridiculous profits started to really come hit . it does seem to really come hit. it does seem like they need to update the mechanisms by which they the multinationals of this kind because it's quite easy for them to move their profits isn't it. they have it means in ways saying no, what have to pay saying no, what we have to pay for intellectual property for the intellectual property right logo. and right of the shell logo. and that happens be based in the that happens to be based in the islands something. and and islands or something. and and all you know, and you all it goes, you know, and you look a couple undergrads and look at a couple undergrads and 34 million for last year tablet enough. 40 billion. i mean, come on all the gb news on fairly is all the gb news present good. do want to present good. do you want to mention the picture on the front page or is of no. page there or is that of no. well i yeah he's that's well i mean yeah he's that's zelensky's out with the zelensky's hanging out with the european commissioner. i don't know what he's doing is he made her a quilt or, he signed ukraine this is so sweet but essentially the story is that
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yeah they ain't joining the eu , yeah they ain't joining the eu, at least not in any . yeah, at least not in any. yeah, unless they not in any sort of sense that they're going to bnng sense that they're going to bring the war it and the afghan refugees to quit london. yeah i mean this the way that the afghani refugees being treated i think is disgusting are people who helped and has lied. they're not being kicked . they're not being kicked. they're leaving london for wetherby that sounds well, yeah. but they've been here for year. they've set up their homes, their children now schools, doing now attending schools, doing exams whatnot. yeah, yeah. exams and whatnot. yeah, yeah. they're in four star they're staying in a four star hotel kensington . no, that's hotel in kensington. no, that's not so bad. but we got here, general, former afghani general . like translates as . we've got like translates as these are people whose lives are put at risk, have helped the uk . yeah. and now to be sort of sent and they're going to be like hour from the town up in like an hour from the town up in leeds it's going be some leeds and it's going to be some of do have jobs. so of the more do have jobs. so isn't they're going to be isn't ideal they're going to be nearly and that's how nearly the same and that's how bad is. mean the guy didn't bad it is. i mean the guy didn't just make his kingdom in a four star hotel kensington star hotel in kensington indefinitely. perhaps things should have been done more immediately. been
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immediately. he should have been the call. now the first port of call. now you've got the mirror. yes this is greenwood charges . so mason is greenwood charges. so mason greenwood, massive story and is charges have been dropped against him and so he's just saying he's relieved and it's all pretty non—committal so far the club is saying it will conduct its own process determining that steps as monday night was one of night of course he was one of his most talented strikers could score goals with two phases like the future monday night. but then he had this charge more against him that was just very disturbing audio going around. i don't believe was ever don't believe it was ever confirmed. that was definitely him and. the him on the audio and. now the charge been dropped, but of course way the world is course in the way the world is now terminated deal now covered terminated his deal ey deal him ey terminated his deal took him out just because out of fifa so just because a charge of cannae come to charge of cannae come back to the is a big question i the game is a big question i mean there's precedent for this but would sponsors able to but would sponsors be able to put pressure united itself it's well i don't know in light of so not pick me i mean so a massive missiles i don't i don't missiles i don't know i don't know i suppose that's the know i mean i suppose that's the point can the point they can drop the individuals sponsorship deals. he's be hit he's obviously going to be hit
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by not as hard as he by that but not as hard as he would be. if they said, listen, if you want to carry on carrying our name your you our name on your shirts, you know that's the that's know that's that's the that's this a very tricky story. this is a very tricky story. gary neville's in gary neville's already got in trouble retweeting a former trouble for retweeting a former head cps basically head of the cps and basically saying and saying that he's innocent. and then people have sort of then lots of people have sort of attacked gary gary attacked gary neville. gary neville well neville said he's innocent. well he the former head of. he retweeted the former head of. the cps said, well, look, if he's no charges means legally he's no charges means legally he's retweeted that he's no charges means legally h
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it's been the crime . yeah that it's been the crime. yeah that isn't the same as what this is but i'm saying the cps really all over the place when it comes to these issues times josh and british gas ban from force fitting new metres so this is actual journalism and actually making a positive impact on the world. the times sent out its undercover journalist that found that this this company was basically breaking into vulnerable people's houses to fit these metres. and i had a meeting this when i was at university and it's a really it's a horrible thing like. suddenly it just runs out and two in the morning or whatever and you to go down to the and you have to go down to the petrol if you've got petrol station if you've got enough cash on you or whatever. this fashioned money this is an old fashioned money in the metre. the way this exactly exactly what exactly that's exactly what it is. the thing normally you is. and the thing normally you think legally they're not think that legally they're not allowed people's allowed to cut off people's power these power except for when these metres fitted. right. so metres now fitted. right. so because investigate because of this investigate section some people section and some of the people that mum whose daughter that was a mum whose daughter was had hoist you was disabled and had a hoist you know which were obviously was need, break into
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need, you know they break into people's houses to illegally leave i guess to fit this but now it's been made legal and that's a good thing so they were attempting to sort regressive form of metering which involves like the old fashioned put 50 feet in the meat. when you get your pound essentially that your pound back essentially that they interesting okay they were run interesting okay yeah managed blame yeah we've managed to blame a german is good. german though, which is good. the got it because it was the german got it because it was a german. a german multinational. so yeah, they're tearing what tearing over his wife. what about inflation? peak about inflation? hit its peak says upbeat bank. yeah that's a it's good it's going i think it was 11% in october then it was temper 10.5. now it's gone down a bit further. so by the end of the year there's hoping it's back to about 4. so obviously the window for teachers , train the window for teachers, train drivers, whoever who wanting above inflation rises of 11. and so obviously that window is rapidly decrease because in six months time for them to say, i want 11 cent pay rise, it's going to be like, whoa, wait a minute, inflation is actually now 5. and nick, you have the
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telegraph very fetching picture of rupert everett there. but the lockdown damage to workforce is permanent, which is the main story i know. who'd have thought? just turning the economy off. can't just turn economy off. you can't just turn it on again like like it back on again like like windows 95. yeah we've broken it and we in ways that we don't understand basically what's understand is basically what's happened against happened i was against lockdowns, that's cold lockdowns, but that's cold comfort what the comfort really because what the bank saying that will bank of england saying that will face the workforce face permanent the workforce will shrink permanently in the wake lockdown and all wake of the lockdown and all right so their shrink is not as well that's part of it because well that's part of it because we got increased from the workforce. those people that left. and at jeremy hunt, we want to get back into work who retired early. we've the retired early. we've got the boom boomers in retiring boom baby boomers in retiring anyway, naturally. and so they were talking about potential supply growth, which determines how much the economy can grow before starts to overheat. before it starts to overheat. they saying going to they were saying it's going to be 2.5% now it's going to be nought point over the next nought point 7% over the next couple years. we're facing couple of years. so we're facing perma iain duncan perma stagnation. iain duncan smith mean the
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smith said, i don't mean the bank what's bank understands what's happening in the market and i don't anyone understands don't think anyone understands because saying at because now, as i kept saying at the this unprecedented the time, this unprecedented well yeah maybe well what they well yeah maybe the but certainly the virus was but certainly lockdown on first sight and lockdown was on first sight and obviously disaster and not obviously a disaster and not a lot interacting among lot of interacting forces among them think are them some that i think are arguably not you know , arguably not you know, necessarily disastrous if people taking early retirement or deciding don't want to go back to the full throttle work that they were committed to , that they were committed to, that might be a rebalance that is what to be honest, people were anticipating a hundred years ago when we had automation and technology to do the hard work for us. we were supposed to take it instead we've kind it easy. and instead we've kind of it. i think of kept pace with it. i think the is that they're more the idea is that they're more money out of the economy, the putting they're not putting into it. they're not paying putting into it. they're not paying anymore and they're paying taxes anymore and they're getting pensions. so getting their pensions. yeah, so that the issue and this that is part the issue and this is be able to their is they won't be able to their pensions the can't pensions to the 65 they can't just i mean they can take their pension from investments that they've they're not they've made but they're not getting i do getting state pension. i do think there might be an interesting to say interesting here for them to say that be a kind of
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that there could be a kind of grey area when are grey area when you are approaching retirement it may be considering is considering that maybe life is worth little bit worth living a little bit instead having foot to the instead of having a foot to the pedal instead of having a foot to the pedal, pedal to metal pedal, the pedal to the metal the know there might the whole time, know there might be tax breaks so on. be some tax breaks and so on. people their sixties who do people in their sixties who do encourage in the encourage them to stay in the workforce rather to, as you say, remove themselves and you've thought well, thought about this more. well, you is it is tempting you know, it is it is tempting to me to stay in for another three. you're also coming after a lot printing money and inflation factors at inflation is multiple factors at once the issue. once isn't it. which the issue. yeah think also yeah absolutely. i think also i mean have to walk mean you only have to walk around to realise things around london to realise things have returned normal by have just not returned normal by any tubes are any means. i mean tubes are still empty. that seems to be a fairly strong which amazing extraordinary you the extraordinary you get on the tube, sort of half nine. i tube, it's sort of half nine. i had the courage myself i get had the courage to myself i get all now but i have all taxis now but until i have as front page is coming up as the front page is coming up after break, australia risks after the break, australia risks the king sturgeon the wrath of king sturgeon struggles her principles. netflix no longer a sharing netflix no longer in a sharing mood. we'll see you in a couple of
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yeah welcome back to headline news with josh howie and nick dixon. fridays now and a story that has been so much a slow motion car wreck is the unravelling of a poorly knitted woollen garment snagged on a loose thistle knit nice . yeah. loose thistle knit nice. yeah. this is sturgeon's gender policy in disarray. after she refuses to say transgender rapist is female . so she's got herself all female. so she's got herself all confused and she about this adam clayton guy with the face tattoo. who then to be a woman and absolute mess the first minister so just said she doesn't have enough information to make a decision on this by agreeing that the double rapist was almost certainly only claiming transgender as claiming to be transgender as an easy to know kind of easy way to know what kind of information wants, you information she wants, that you want a search . not want to have a full search. not sure it would involve. it's sure what it would involve. it's amazing over amazing how she's imploded over . we had the, you know, people saying she's on the of saying she's on the verge of quitting. a piece for quitting. i wrote a piece for the daily saying, could the daily sceptic saying, could this wall moment this be the berlin wall moment for because see for wokeness because you see how quickly it could all fall apart because you know, this trans man
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everyone this adam everyone see now this adam graham been the graham case has been the flashpoint haven't seen what flashpoint and haven't seen what nonsense it is, how dangerous it is. so. but you know, it is. i hope so. but you know, it was only months ago that was only few months ago that starmer, define starmer, unable to define a woman on camera. we all thought, this must surely be the end, and we the end of a we could see the end of a promising career he promising political career if he doesn't but somehow doesn't wake up. but somehow they these gaps they stumble over these gaps and it ridiculous. on this very it is ridiculous. on this very programme, have one one of programme, we have one of one of the guests in your seat who was saying that this case was being weapon you know, against weapon ized, you know, against people concerned people were concerned about the trans was then trans issue as it was then weaponized. but i would say, you know what they are saying essentially is this does seem like an outlier. yes is an like an outlier. yes it is an outlier. but the whole point is that that we're anxious that that is that we're anxious that people will cynically an opportunist take advantage of this legislation . and the this legislation. and the outliers are going to be the problem. you know, she says doesn't have enough information about the thing is feminists have been from the rooftops for years this exact that how this would be abused if the system came into play. so the fact that
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she's turning around go i didn't have enough information that's because you've had your fingers in ears. oh even worse you in your ears. oh even worse you have heard it and you cynically it and calling them instead you know racist and whatnot and this is why the whole sort of stonewall motto has been no debate , because the moment it's debate, because the moment it's opened up to any kind of investigate in light of journalists very asking, is this person a woman or not, it crumbles like that. it just it just all falls . and yet they just all falls. and yet they give no ground and it is the classic response, isn't it that they haven't got the information. it's very similar to that woman who is being tested to see whether or not she was of being on the was capable of being on the supreme court. think something supreme court. i think something like go i'm like that was going to go i'm not capable finding a woman. not capable of finding a woman. you this is what this is. you know, this is what this is. it's if you've all the it's like if you've all the time. but what stirred this response i'm whether response was, i'm not whether he's or she's a man. he's a man or well, she's a man. it's whether they're real man or woman. they're rapist. yeah, yeah. them, they are yeah. but for them, they are a man on floor with the man on the floor with the system. much like when leo
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system. it's much like when leo kearse was saying it should be whether made an effort whether you've made an effort and said, that can't and i said, leo, that can't work. can't bring every trans work. we can't bring every trans person that's person in front of you. that's really sturgeon's saying. really what sturgeon's saying. she's by case plot she's it's case by case plot can't we off can't possibly. yeah we kick off with business news so we don't kick off. we've already been in this section business news kick off. we've already been in this from )n business news kick off. we've already been in this from the business news kick off. we've already been in this from the financialess news kick off. we've already been in this from the financial times/s kick off. we've already been in this from the financial times is and from the financial times is the australia's fealty to the end of australia's fealty to the josh seems like king the crown. josh seems like king charles appear on. charles won't appear on. australia's new note so his australia's new $5 note so his mum was on it and she's basically been on various notes throughout australia's . that's throughout australia's. that's a picture of her i don't recognise from our notes a slightly different style . yeah, she's different style. yeah, she's made that whole squinting in the australian is a so drawing is it . oh no it's the if she's been in the sun too long in australia it's something that looks almost like she's asian anyway . it's like she's asian anyway. it's not, there's anything wrong with that that but yes . so now he's that that but yes. so now he's going to still be on the coins. yeah. they've given him that. but got a labour government who in australia who are very much
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staunch republicans and this is the people criticising this move are saying that you're just doing this as a political thing. they replacing it instead with i think aba, indigenous people and culture which they have on a bunch other notes. and it's very, it's a good excuse be able to say oh no, no, we're going to put loads of indigenous people. and just now he's them and it's just now he's for them essentially. this is essentially. but this is interesting. this is, i guess, the sign possible the first sign of possible things come. incredibly things to come. it's incredibly patterned put patterned of them to put indigenous. yeah as a way without having made any real effort to restore their welfare rights, have banknotes had the $5 note we're not going to give you $5. i do remember this comment on his name, but one of the australian premiers 20 years ago, did that know he ago, he did say that know he didn't foresee becoming a republic time of republic during time of elizabeth, but that was because australians were elizabethan rather than monarchists. and of course princess diana had a famously successful draw there as well. i suppose it is a big surprise if this if they're grabbing this opportunity. no it's always all falling apart
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like you said, because of death of our beloved queen. it was always going to happen. and you've just got so attacks you've just got so many attacks on at the time. you on the monarchy at the time. you got meghan and. so got meghan and harry and. so it's going to apart. it's all going to fall apart. and got weaker monarch and we've got a weaker monarch with charles. he's a more sensitive kind of guy and all that. but it also, i think, is a bit much australia going no, we're and we're also progressive and grace like mean basically turn like i mean you basically turn into penal colony during covid into a penal colony during covid you we camps and you had like we had camps and stuff had incredibly stuff you had incredibly authoritarian this weird authoritarian it's this weird smiling authoritarian as smiling face of authoritarian as a light, little a shining light, nice little member. came with member. i thought i came up with this somebody told me. it this quote. somebody told me. it was clive but the point was clive james. but the point about they're not about australia is they're not descended they descended from convicts. they from that was from prison. gov yeah, that was a point and it's there's a good point and it's there's a certain that there's a little bit to that. there's bit of truth to that. there's there tendency in there to there is a tendency in there to regard a pretty straight country in terms drinking about in terms of drinking about jaywalking, like they're jaywalking, things like they're very right. but very tough on the right. but i will if was in australian will say, if i was in australian i would find a bit odd. we i would find it a bit odd. we had any kind you know, that had any kind of, you know, that we subjects of a it's all we were subjects of a it's all it anyway. the whole concept going to be there. family with
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us might be odd, us is family. it might be odd, but know, kind of gather but you know, you kind of gather around house the you won't around the house the you won't see to friday's see anyway over to friday's mirror things changing at mirror things are changing at netflix josh. oh my god netflix as well josh. oh my god this is this is going to cause a little bit of pain out there, particularly for netflix reveals. it stop others reveals. how it will stop others using account. tough new using your account. tough new crackdown. been crackdown. now, this has been coming now. they've coming for a while now. they've been subscribers. been losing subscribers. they've been losing subscribers. they've been but not making been not losing but not making the have been. the money they should have been. and they are and so now finally, they are going to start crack down, cracking down on all of this. they're still keep they're going to still keep basically going have basically you're going to have to in every couple of weeks to log in every couple of weeks or if they are still or so to if they are still there. and they're also going to follow different follow all the different devices. you allowed some devices. so you are allowed some devices, think there are devices, but i think there are people are the people who are taking the mickey. yeah and i don't have a problem and know just the problem this and i know just the mirror go oh going to mirror kind of go oh going to get they're being get tough and they're being brutal. mirror made brutal. like the mirror made their version readable their paper version readable onune their paper version readable online from online to prevent people from people their services. people pay for their services. yeah i mean, i had very yeah i mean, i had a very different this, different way of covering this, but read just that in but i read just that in december, the government's intellectual office intellectual property office deemed sharing is a deemed the password sharing is a criminal civil offence. so
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criminal and civil offence. so you could face prosecution. so then i changed everything. i was going to write . i don't know . going to write. i don't know. there's any problem with that. i mean, there's four people in my family. we have a netflix account and we share it between us. not problem, is it? us. that's not a problem, is it? it's like everyone has to it's not like everyone has to have. if your friend have. you know, if your friend who on holiday with who once went on holiday with and using that and you're still using that account three years later, i don't see any problem with it at all. think it's good. i think all. i think it's good. i think people stop taking media people should stop taking media granted higher education news now days telegraph now in five days telegraph less than young people than a quarter of young people think universal d worthwhile. think universal d is worthwhile. nick restored nick yeah, it's restored my faith people. a third faith in young people. a third of think a university of people think a university degree is a waste time. of degree is a waste of time. of course, that's slightly wrong. it's an expensive waste of time that brainwashes you into marxist you know, marxist ideas, but you know, obviously some degrees important like science. like medicine and science. but i think on right think they're on the right track. they'd say that it track. they'd be 58% say that it doesn't students for doesn't prepare students for the real definitely real world. that's definitely true people true they polled 2000 people this higher education this was a higher education policy . 32% of 18 to 24 year policy. 32% of 18 to 24 year olds agree with the statement. university degree waste university degree is a waste time. that's the time. 22% disagree. that's the bit found interesting. 22%
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disagree. so that's actually a smaller number who are certain about about half more than half an expression of opinion, but only a quarter said they thought it was worthwhile . i mean, it was worthwhile. i mean, that's a more stark figure to me. well, yes, the number of people for whom it is worthwhile roughly so apathetic. i mean, some of it didn't even bother applying but applying properly. but yeah, i mean, think. i mean, mean, what you think. i mean, it's obviously course it's obviously a lot of course is now just sort of nonsense and they get you in debt obviously some courses technical things they get you in debt obviously son necessary technical things they get you in debt obviously son necessary but1nical things they get you in debt obviously son necessary but andil things they get you in debt obviously son necessary but and you ngs are necessary but and you can get it online. started get it online. they started doing online people are doing online courses. people are saying as well on saying we might as well go on youtube that's a good youtube and think that's a good case the interesting case for that. the interesting thing these 2000 thing here is of these 2000 people, it doesn't say how many of are actually in of them are actually in universities? just like universities? so it's just like young people now. a couple of people just 1860. people have just turned 1860. they at 16. they're they left school at 16. they're all they've their all jobs. they've just their first working so first cars. they're working so it isn't, of course, in when you're in that but it has become a become the default option a has become the default option for swathe of middle for a huge swathe of middle england not going benefit england who not going to benefit from it's just become from it but it's just become like a hygiene issue. it's not like a hygiene issue. it's not like oh, i'm
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like kind of going, oh, i'm a i've a degree. it's like i've got a degree. it's like having something it's having something flashy. it's more like if you don't have a you have you don't you don't have it, you don't even to wipe. you know, even know how to wipe. you know, that kind of is a feeling like, oh degree in says hygiene oh my degree in says hygiene factors. yeah, it's not, it's not positive. you don't not positive. but if you don't it, a negative. and then it, it's a negative. and then blair of the blame for blair was a lot of the blame for that with his 50% go to university not we agree over to the independent just what the independent now just what looks like the most looks to me like the most dangerous repurposed dangerous and easily repurposed and wandered the and just they wandered onto the extraordinarily here extraordinarily ground here but go let's see go on anyone should. let's see if dig ourselves out of if we can dig ourselves out of this swamp, if at all possible. swim out. mri reveal of swim out. mri scans reveal of racism poverty on black racism and poverty on black children's brains. now, that's not mix up science race, which with sociology manage it. you know all of stuff and essentially they toxic stress and they're saying it's caused by racism poverty as an impact on black children's brains for the for their life that's not really what the study is about and the study is something that we've known for a long time is, that people's childhood at that
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the that their brain the way that their brain develops during their will stick those stay forever. and those will stay forever. and certainly been through certainly people been through trauma, that's physical trauma, whether that's physical abuse who grow abuse, but also people who grow up poverty and the stress of up in poverty and the stress of the nutrition. all these have a massive impact. and the one big thing is a attachment theory . so thing is a attachment theory. so if you have like people are people who are orphans, people who grow up with just one parent or absent parents or not six to parent, this an parent, all of this has an impact. so what they've done is made kind thing where made this kind of thing where and this is a study in america where they've kind of seen these differences of brains, in differences of brains, but in poverty, but really because of poverty, but really because of poverty they've tried to make a causal going well map do causal link going well map to do more more black in america more of it more black in america live in poverty then it's a racism issue i think it's a very badidea racism issue i think it's a very bad idea to start doing racial mri scans. i have to say it's virtually going back to callipers, isn't it? but yeah, i was to say independent, getting dangerously close to phonology and bizarre newspaper and it's is a bizarre newspaper and it's is a bizarre newspaper and they but it comes they get to they go race as to the end. they go race as a social construct and it's all about inequality. it's about the
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independent trying prove that independent trying to prove that everything on is social inequality make inequality and to make everything race, not the everything about race, not the two things the left, like we saw with the police brutality story yesterday. anyway, enough with the police brutality story yespartny. anyway, enough with the police brutality story yespart two. |yway, enough with the police brutality story yespart two. coming enough with the police brutality story yespart two. coming up, enough with the police brutality story yespart two. coming up, thingsh for part two. coming up, things a more fun. we have a little bit more fun. we have sensitivity readers for books, gatekeepers jim's chastity gatekeepers for jim's chastity belts, profit fathers. we'll belts, for profit fathers. we'll see you in a couple of minutes there. that .
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welcome to headline is getting straight back into it we have nick now taking us through some awful real news of famous authorities understandably peeved at the latest indignities. yes anthony horowitz hurt by cuts to book after sensitive read so he is the rights of the alex rider spy novels and he deliberately put in a native american in there just for you know because it would be interesting. but then of course, people didn't like
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and he got in all sorts of trouble and at point he said trouble and at one point he said that guy had face that that the guy had a face that could been carved out of could have been carved out of wood, a mere sort of metaphor. but this was taken out because of potential cigar of potential allusion to cigar store. this is how ludicrous this also when went this it also they when they went to scalpel with surgical to a place scalpel with surgical instrument because they're claiming linked to claiming that it's linked to scalping of course he scalping whereas of course he pointed out actually scalpel comes latin word comes from the latin word meaning to cut, whereas the scalping comes from the middle. england word meaning england in midlands word meaning the top of the head. so they're just basically. simon the just basically. simon it's the latest ignorant latest in sick ignorant brainwash liberty books. brainwash liberty ruining books. he was was actually just he was he was actually just couldn't off of the bit couldn't write off of the bit and being sensitive to things that at all that weren't problematic at all and that's they did and they find problems there aren't find problems where there aren't any he said he had been any he was he said he had been told earlier he he raised some indignation he just indignation because he just wanted have a black character wanted to have a black character in his a major character in his book a major character and was that this was and he was told that this was dangerous appropriation dangerous cultural appropriation . about . he shouldn't write about things know about. and things he does know about. and they native they started with a native american . toe yeah. american. yes. toe in. yeah. then next he'll go, well, what about ken case wrote the most
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famous american fiction. famous native american fiction. probably the guy in one flew over the cuckoo's nest. that was i mean, don't know that it was i mean, i don't know that it was a particularly sympathetic or sympathetic portrayal. but it certainly in the certainly came out well in the film . yes, sensational. i mean, film. yes, sensational. i mean, it's ridiculous idea. but i mean, the thing is, you say that they him to it. the they wanted him to do it. the point he did it. they point is he did it. they suggested those changes. he suggested those changes. yes, he made them and is the thing that he at the end of his he says at the end of his saying, yeah, at the moment it's really not worth challenging people because punitive people because of the punitive response might get. i'm sorry maybe you can talk it but that's cowardice like you've given cowardice like just you've given in it's no complain in there and it's no complain about the word. about unless you wrote the word. so agree with you. so i totally agree with you. that's what i think it is this big. oh, we a big. so you've got to up to these things. i to stand up to these things. i say, oh, we have to do so say, oh, we have to do this. so really all the genuine things. i think is why exactly you're think this is why exactly you're in because people in the situation because people haven't stood and but haven't stood up and said, but i would love to at least would i would love to at least argue devil's here that argue devil's advocate here that it is probably sensible to get the published not have a the book published not have a massive your and your massive row with your and your agent say agent and then afterwards say incidentally, if
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incidentally, i don't know if you're this, but you're aware of this, but authors exposed to this kind authors are exposed to this kind of now it's fine. i'll take the world scalpel out because doesn't matter. doesn't really matter. but honestly go honestly do we really want go down path. that seems to me down this path. that seems to me a think you we're having a think you know we're having the because if the conversation because if he just his agent and publish just lost his agent and publish overi just lost his agent and publish over i mean don't whine about it then i think you get to then i don't think you get to have your and it on the have your cake and eat it on the stove thing sort complain stove thing sort of complain about actually you about it when actually you didn't he calls it up against it he calls it death by a thousand cuts but it doesn't say if those cuts but it doesn't say if those cuts with a scalpel a cuts are with a scalpel or a surgical instrument possibly surgical instrument or possibly a just daily mail. a cigar cutter. just daily mail. now radio seems now bbc radio two. it seems a listener's due to their policy of hiring year old of ageism hiring 50 year old scamps mills like 89 scamps like scott mills like 89 year presenters. ready to year old presenters. so ready to refugees have abandoned bbc station terms. station for commercial terms. yeah of the bbc yeah actually all of the bbc output to gone down output seems to have gone down the has gone down the radio output has gone down considerably and it's moving over and lost. yeah, five, 580,000 listeners during the year and lost. ken, bruce, steve. right paul o'grady and that's lost or sacked while some of them sacked, some of them
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kind of not shown the love. and so but definitely with an agenda to chase for the youth audience yeah. and this is the thing is that first of all those 580,000 people were from last year so impact what's going to be happening now is going to be bigger than that . and number two bigger than that. and number two is you never chase your audience like don't chase youth. you'll get old. yeah. and that's to be fair, it's going to happen every so often. i think paul o'grady went a little bit early possibly, but i do think possibly, but i do think possibly steve wright had run its course. i mean, had an its course. i mean, he had an extra long career in 21 extra long career in about 21 years, think he was years, i think enough he was this guy, scott mills, who i listen to. he's been on radio one, but he's been popular. the he years old. that he is now 50 years old. that surely old enough to able to surely old enough to be able to be trusted with. radio two, isn't it? there'll be a little bit and then we're failing bit of a and then we're failing to recognise said, to recognise that. they said, i mean do understand radio two mean i do understand radio two is listener like is for the mature listener like to classic pop from the to hear classic pop from the sixties seventies but it's not like they're bringing in gobby
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16 or something do 16 year olds or something to do well, left because well, paul o'grady left because he work with rob. becky he had to work with rob. becky i didn't think rob was that bad. i've it all right the i've and it seems all right the roster seven. well yeah. what roster is seven. well yeah. what i love this boom radio though i love is this boom radio though simon where you have to be born between and i've between 1946 and 1984. i've checked just miss checked your date. you just miss out. but i. yeah, pretty out. but i. yeah, it's pretty cool it's called cool for boomers. it's called boom the great thing boom radio. but the great thing about it's just for about this is it's all just for great because the more people that stop, nobody starts missing radios. very radios. yes. thank you very much. do need some much. wonderful. we do need some more channel. jim more music on the channel. jim news guardian. nick and news now the guardian. nick and you have again women are not being noticed the correct amount. watch this creep amount. yes so watch this creep women jim on tiktok women exposing jim on tiktok it's it's out now. well, it's strange it's out now. well, it's strange it's out now. well, it's strange. it's partly why it's strange. it's partly why it's we have that it's coming now. we have that video viral video the other day went viral where woman was claiming, where the woman was claiming, oh, is me, whereas oh, this man is at me, whereas really, he just seemed to be glancing briefly saying, what's that woman doing? oh she's filming approach filming how to not approach girls gym loudly and girls at the gym loudly and shooting like a man in the gym. is she gym? she was saying is she in gym? so she was saying that this guy is like creeping on him. if you look and, he's just in the background, sort of
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minding own business. minding his own business. yeah. and flexing muscles. and he's flexing its muscles. he's much. if he's not doing that much. if you're and you're you're filming and you're dressed she is what dressed like, she is what he's looking on over looking at, what's going on over there, it's a woman filming. there, oh, it's a woman filming. a little creepy that she's filming him with. exactly. knowing feels to me knowing that it feels to me wrong. now illegal to wrong. but now it's illegal to be man in a gym just go be a man in a gym let's just go back totally separate spaces back to totally separate spaces again. saying before again. you were saying before the we knew the show, josh, if only we knew how define a man or a woman how to define a man or a woman to able to do that. the examples given in these different clips of somewhat ridiculous like literally the literally so anybody goes to the gym nick and i, we work out regularly together. so know what's know, you what's what but you know, you rest between reps you're rest in between reps and you're looking . yeah. and also you're looking. yeah. and also you're seeing person finishing seeing as this person finishing with equipment. it with that equipment. yeah. is it like that's to not that. like now that's to not that. there sexual harassment there isn't sexual harassment within gyms. i think there probably is quite a lot of it. but examples give given but the examples give given here, i'll say that i've seen a somewhat difficulties somewhat reduced difficulties and i go to the gym. it is and i also go to the gym. it is difficult if you're surrounded by some bodies, you know, there are a of flesh. some are like a lot of flesh. some bodies are in good shape, some bodies are in good shape, some bodies bad shape. bodies are in bad shape. you've just . you try and limit
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just glanced. you try and limit the staring . i was kind of the staring. i was kind of maintaining, but i think a lot of blokes check out other blokes in gyms as well in a sensible way. but like kind of at excludes. yeah there was a sort of because of a lady doing a squat with, a heavy body and she got stuck on the bottom. you're thinking that's when you need a man come and you out. man to come and help you out. did help her out and did someone help her out and then woman helped her then actually a woman helped her out. you a lot of times out. but if you a lot of times it probably afraid that. exactly exactly. ladies with exactly. so that's ladies with josh come the team news now and at one ugandan is at least one ugandan man is swimming deep swimming against the deep population that population trends that a man with 102 children says enough is enough. wow what wimp one and why stop at a2i this is this pathetic how many mothers is he distributed that loads well . oh distributed that loads well. oh wow so he's at times kind of like mousa has a kasra he's got 102 children , 578 grandchildren. 102 children, 578 grandchildren. he cannot even remember all of his children's , let alone
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his children's, let alone grandchild. they all a lot of them all sort of live together on, this kind of farm . so he's on, this kind of farm. so he's got like 20 thatched mud huts , got like 20 thatched mud huts, which i'm quite jealous of because these that means he's got a garden. yeah. and but he had a successful cattle business and it seems like butchers and then that's kind of been affected also some of the mums are leaving him recently . he'd are leaving him recently. he'd say to them, look, you guys need to go on contraception because this is too, feed my this is too, i can't feed my kids anymore . do you have any kids anymore. do you have any idea how is can't 68. wow idea how old is can't 68. wow and he's still capable of fathering . that is remarkable. fathering. that is remarkable. my fathering. that is remarkable. my favourite quote is how can a man be satisfied with one woman? that's a sign of being born a man but with hormones man but with female hormones he's sort of ugandan top g. he he's a sort of ugandan top g. he wants women he's wants multiple women and he's got it's very complicated complicated this because he needs mothers the needs the mothers identify the children. he asks his children. but then he asks his to some the wives to identify some of the wives because forgot who they are as well. i like how could well. so i like that. how could a yeah. a sign of a woman is yeah a man with female hormones. we another story is we have we have another story is concerned the inadequate
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parenting on the friday's mirror in loco parentis alexa has her limits yeah yeah is a dad loses custody of daughter five after leaving alexa to babysit after he went to the pub . so the funny he went to the pub. so the funny thing about well funny thing about this bizarre thing about this story halfway down it suddenly says, yeah, he was discovered have been discovered to have been using a virtual assistant after being arrested for arrested by police for strangling partner at the end of their session. and their drinking session. and that's paragraph that's like paragraph six or something. so talk about. burying yeah, exactly. burying the lead. yeah, exactly. so to number pub. she so they went to number pub. she can't remember anything. was can't remember anything. he was strangling i'm not strangling her, which i'm not making but i'm making light of, but i'm speaking the they put speaking of the fact they put that low. and yeah. the that so low. and yeah. so the moral and you're using an moral is and if you're using an electronic baby sitter, don't, don't your girlfriend don't strangle your girlfriend just you says the end just before you says the end here there was some effort by him to keep an eye on her. but he knows the standards fell below what expected of a parent. so does have some so he does have some self—awareness. there's possibilities. anyway, that's part afraid. part three over, i'm afraid. the other news there's a part other bad news is there's a part for coming up got nate for coming up we've got nate going grapple with satan. going to grapple with satan. it's virtues of a
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it's he testing the virtues of a testicular battery my goodness i will be sitting here wincing see in a
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welcome back to headline. there's lots of good stories to cram into the last few minutes. nick, religious news now in the daily mail a few years ago it was we now have a new alternative the tired old churches mosques , synagogues. churches mosques, synagogues. yes, it's satanists . so the yes, it's satanists. so the global of satan, uk claims global order of satan, uk claims have seen huge rise in membership. for some reason, membership. and for some reason, the town of bangui the suffolk town of bangui has become a hub for satan worshippers in bangui. yeah, and it's all do of course with the decline of christianity. the woke church women and sam smith's music. but they smith's music. but also they actually admit that they're actually kind admit that they're sort the sort of progressive. they the global satan insists global order of satan insists that progressive, that it's progressive, independent, non—autistic, satanic . but to what they satanic. but listen to what they say they about decline say here. they about the decline in dogmatic religions and a movement towards self—identify and self—realisation. so they're that identity politics essentially satanism their words
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not mine but slowly is the idea that you can create your own is the fundamental heresy , isn't the fundamental heresy, isn't it? yes. and it goes back to people, aleister crowley, who said do what they are well, shall be the whole of the law. it's anything . one, you it's do anything. one, you identify you want and you identify how you want and you don't care about society and yet. it's not yet. and this is and it's not that surprising in the culture. and i find it quite interesting because think pointed out because i think they pointed out one the story. know, even one in the story. you know, even milton paradise lost had milton in paradise lost had a grudging for satan for grudging respect for satan for standing sort of standing up to the sort of default, and obedience default, worship and obedience and and in heaven he made and so on and in heaven he made satan the more interesting and it's of left open. who it's kind of left open. who should side with? i have also encountered, i think they called the church of satan. they might be branches i think be different branches i think they were set up in los angeles in the sixties or something. it was quite good that the manifesto was quite strong. it was self reliance as much was like self reliance as much as self identification. yeah, they good patter. i mean, they have a good patter. i mean, it's scientology. mean, it's like scientology. i mean, they as the kind of you they use that as the kind of you know, quote milton and. know, you can quote milton and. they kind they that's the kind of legitimate face of it but then
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you find out there's a load of cats hung stuff. so what do cats hung and stuff. so what do you yeah, i mean, you think, josh yeah, i mean, it's funny they're saying it's just funny they're saying there's yeah, you there's devil and yeah, like you say that it's all like very aggressive, but is what the devil yes, that's and devil would say. yes, that's and also they here, they also when they say here, they said choose it because said but they choose it because he the first speak and he the first to speak out and rational whatnot. and you rational and whatnot. and you none of that other stuff in the bible like i don't know much about the new testament i'm sure the devil's not a good guy. well, devil he doesn't. well, the devil mean he doesn't. he of course he he does crop up. of course he christ you know, temptations christ the you know, temptations and the devil emerge and so on. but the devil emerge and so on. but the devil emerge a more through. the thomas a lot more through. the thomas aquinas and saint augustine and so then dante and the so on. and then dante and the inferno and that sort of inferno and all that sort of he's kind of much he's he's kind of emerged much vividly through post—christian . vividly through post—christian. you think that old school christians. i think he's there in artificial intelligence ? i in artificial intelligence? i think absolutely full of think he's absolutely full of demons. it's i don't demons. i think it's no, i don't think any coincidence. it's think it's any coincidence. it's coming face of that. coming back in the face of that. i that's unleashing demons i think that's unleashing demons and obviously particle and obviously the particle accelerator in the cern, of course, as we also opened up other dimensions been killing
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some cats at times i think it's a choice of bungie though i'm i have to say back to the independent joshua. really to be on a roll when it comes to sharing spurious research at the moment. oh, indeed. how long do people wait bailing on people wait before bailing on a bad than an hour, bad day? less than an hour, apparently. a classic apparently. this a classic article of , essentially a press article of, essentially a press release from britannia rescue teaming up with denise van outen to launch a date site rescue hotline, essentially people take 25 minutes to discern that this isn't going well yeah and then they'll stick it for a little bit longer, mostly through politeness. yeah. so half an hour to 25 minutes, you know, it's. and then another half an houn it's. and then another half an hour, just to find it. and it takes me like two months to break out with them. listen i went university in 1983. went to university in 1983. i before the of the first before the end of the first term, wasn't out for that term, i wasn't out for that course did three years. course and i did three years. yeah, yeah. i mean, knowing yeah, yeah. i mean, just knowing i got married. yeah. let i got married. yeah. hey, let me talk. have no means of talk. i just have no means of escape. i want date. i went escape. if i want date. i went on where i wanted to on a date where i wanted to leave within minutes. not 25 minutes, three or four. but
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minutes, like three or four. but i thought you can't really run out public out because if you're a public figure you're quite he's just fine online you don't mean fine online so you don't mean it's to how it's quite hard to decide how you feel, yeah, this show you feel, right. yeah, this show does. there's a of does. but there's a lot of excuses use and there's excuses people use and there's broken getting stuff broken down are getting stuff stuck in traffic that's how to use one shoe there on day use one shoe there on the day those day just just sort those a pre day just just sort of be us and i will say, you know, is a superpower to be know, it is a superpower to be able extricate yourself from able to extricate yourself from able to extricate yourself from a no longer it's it a she no longer happier it's it is from a date to is everything from a date to a bad marriage. i think it is it's a significant way elevating a significant way of elevating your chances of happiness is learning how to say no, this isn't a way that isn't working me in a way that isn't working me in a way that isn't to annoy isn't going to annoy people. it's strength as it's not really our strength as a is it is not and a nation is it is not and certainly not as a six stripping who's now josh from else debate is still a profitable fetish that would could that you would think could be satisfied even most satisfied but then even most stale to be on stale of marriages to be on indeed bolt with indeed stripper bolt with £130,000 earning from night of kicking man's testicles testicle . this is even more money than shell make it certainly more
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than that tax bill she was on a podcast guess as a podcast for sort of pulling people and strippers or whatever there's this podcast is called pillow talk never heard of it. i mean, like i guess there is pillow talk. yeah, regular listener like it and she was basically as you revealed this was the most amount of money she'd made in one day. some guy just wanted her to just kick away. i imagine how they bargain for that. how he negotiated. so what did he did she say? how much? how much 7 did she say? how much? how much ? oh, extrude and you would normally think the market would set the price a little lower than that? well, it's been a woman, you know. i would have done it. yeah why did she buy a house in the philippines? you get a house in middlesbrough or something? get something? 400. you get hillsborough i mean, i'm hillsborough people. i mean, i'm not into this stuff. fool me once, but the people , well, you once, but the people, well, you know, people are like losers. who in the iguanas this a player he's obviously knows him well maybe that was why he was wanting to be kicked brought down a peg or two anyway we move
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on to science news and genetic mutants in the daily star it sounds like a recipe for fish to bite your own fingers. yeah scientists splice alligator dna into fish to make super mutant creatures. what could possibly go wrong. and they want to make it more reliable source. they'll have a longer lifespan, be more resistant to certain bacteria . resistant to certain bacteria. be to be clear, this is the fish is like the basic model and it's got a bit of alligator dna, not the other way around. alligators. yes yeah. and it's to with the antibiotic to do with the antibiotic resistant bacteria. there's naturally anti—microbial protein . anyway, it's very complicated. simon but they live longer and then all susceptible illness. is it cramming too many fish? it is too many together . and now what too many together. and now what they messed up here is said that they've made sure they can't reproduce. immediately reproduce. but i immediately wrote life finds a way they said life finds a way . you know, it's life finds a way. you know, it's dangerous . and the other quote dangerous. and the other quote from jurassic park, what was it your were so busy working out
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what they could do they didn't stop to wonder whether they should. yes if they can produce then if they got the actual general population snap , they general population snap, they would just both and also they would just both and also they would have this would they would have this natural mean is what i'm natural i mean this is what i'm talking about with demons and devils art. you know, the devils in art. you know, the extent we are toying extent to which we are toying with nature at the moment based on the wildest of fowl. so you think satanists up for think the satanists be up for this stuff? i assume this kind of stuff? i assume they well, mean, they would, yes. well, i mean, possibly rational grounds, possibly not rational grounds, but they certainly are not being held some that god held back by some sense that god designed universe designed perfect universe and you an alligator designed perfect universe and yotso an alligator designed perfect universe and yotso they an alligator designed perfect universe and yotso they think an alligator designed perfect universe and yotso they think not. alligator designed perfect universe and yotso they think not. why|tor designed perfect universe and yotso they think not. why not of. so they think not. why not do should we finish do they think should we finish up with football news? josh, this presumably some sort of this is presumably some sort of glitch been given. glitch that you've been given. this satanic, but it turns this is satanic, but it turns out translate out video game can translate into world. well, into the real world. well, that's i didn't know much that's how i didn't know much about video football, but i do know a little bit about video games. club fine. know a little bit about video games. club fine per games. club fine. £22,000 per match in match for this manager. who's in charge on charge after he learned trade on football now nick has football manager now nick has informed me that this actually is misnomer because he is a slight misnomer because he actually a bit of actually did a fair bit of training do like this idea
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training but i do like this idea that kind of those hours is that this kind of those hours is a wasted as a teenager a seemingly wasted as a teenager can actually come back and make huge mostly he's got supposedly since he's joined this team that's in france he they've won nearly a apart from one every single game so they're to take that fun i guess yeah he gets his uefa best flight the that it's not even like the week the wage bill for a mid—level striker at £22,000 a week. i wouldn't know you're right i've got age my gb news they get fined heavily the things i say, but i'm so good they just. they've kept his they've just kept me on his i love stat darius i think love it stat darius i think that's how it's pronounced they've a lovely cathedral there. i mean, suppose it there. i mean, i suppose it depends video game you depends which video game you play, are probably play, right? there are probably some ways. so immediately while they tv. when i was they pay tv. pundit when i was a teenager, this minute son teenager, this minute my son plays creed. i plays assassin's creed. i actually into it actually got him into it deliberately. art book deliberately. i found art book of waterstones and. it of theirs in waterstones and. it was beautiful graphic art was just beautiful graphic art and got him into and he's and i got him into and he's learned interesting and i got him into and he's learnabout. interesting and i got him into and he's learn about. int
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but he still but at the moment he still thinks very much art thinks it's very much an art trip anyway that's all for trip now anyway that's all for tonight's show. let's take another look. friday's another quick look. friday's front we the front pages before we go, the daily people simply vanish daily mail people simply vanish into the telegraph into thin air. the telegraph have locked down, damaged workforce is permanent. you only had watch tonight's show to get a sense of how real that is guardian for a tougher win for tax after shell posts obscene record profits and a of the being tinged with the possibility of eu membership which is then snatched away from him. the lead with the green mason greenwood charges of assault have been dropped and finally the times gas banned from 50 new metres in the photograph if there is of a couple who have benefited from the previous rather unpleasant regime that they have in place those we are front that is all we have time for thank you very much to my guests remember that headliners and if you're watching the 5 am. repeat stay tuned breakfast show just after the break. i have been silent
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evans i've been joined by josh and nick night i think andrew was in the hot seat after joining us to find out who wins. good goodnight
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it's been one week's since lancashire dog walker nicola bully disappeared . good morning bully disappeared. good morning . it's 6:00 on friday. the 3rd of february. and this is breakfast on good news with steven and angela. here are your top stories this morning. well, the family of missing mother of two, nicola boulay, have said their lives have been emptied after the 45 year old mortgage adviser went missing in st michaels on wire last friday. it comes after lancashire police released a cctv image of potential witness yesterday. nicholas sister louise has urged
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