Skip to main content

tv   Headliners  GB News  February 5, 2023 11:00pm-12:01am GMT

11:00 pm
welcome back. i'm aaron armstrong in the gb newsroom. some breaking news to start with. the head of epsom college has been found dead alongside her husband and seven year old daughter. the bodies of emma paterson , her daughter letty and paterson, her daughter letty and husband george were found a prestigious boarding school in the early hours of this morning. surrey police are investigating, but they say they are confident it's an isolated and there no third party involved and a private underwater company will join the search for nicola pulley as fresh images of the missing mother of two have been released. the specialist diving company sgi will assist police
11:01 pm
searching the wyre after offering its services free of . offering its services free of. it comes hours after the first images of nicola on the day she disappeared were released by her family . now lancashire police family. now lancashire police believe she fell into the river but ice chief executive peter folding says that may not be the case. huge operation . the police case. huge operation. the police divers can only search same as us with divers . you know , 150 us with divers. you know, 150 metres a day. so is a nine kilometres of river whatever. so there's peaks and. it's a slow moving . if nicola had gone in moving. if nicola had gone in the river, she wouldn't have gone far . the river the river, she wouldn't have gone far. the river is not. it's not, in my experience, a dream deaung not, in my experience, a dream dealing with these drowning victims. they don't normally travel far , but they often where travel far, but they often where they go down, they all they're where they fall in. the met police has again apologised to the victims of the serial rapist david carrick ahead of his
11:02 pm
sentencing hearing . the sacked sentencing hearing. the sacked police constable has 49 criminal charges, including 24 counts of rape against 12 women. the says they're truly sorry for the harm and devastation caused to the victims , saying he should never victims, saying he should never have been a police . the uk's have been a police. the uk's biggest nurses union offered to call off next week's strikes in england if the prime minister makes a new, meaningful offer. the rcn has appealed to rishi sunak to offers made by the welsh and scottish governments, both of which have led to strikes being suspended. nurses and ambulance staff are combining tomorrow on monday. why are predicted to be the biggest of strike action in the history of the nhs .7 ukraine says history of the nhs.7 ukraine says it's expected a possible major new offensive russia this month as . the anniversary of the as. the anniversary of the invasion approaches defence minister alexei reznik says ukraine will be able to hold off moscow's forces, despite not all of the west's military
11:03 pm
reinforcements arriving in time. however, the foreign dmitry kuleba says ukraine will receive up to 140 battle tanks on tuesday in what he's described as first wave of reinforcements being by a western coalition of 12 countries. tv and dab+ radio. this gb news. now it's time for headliners . headliners. hello, i'm josh howie. welcome to headliners, where we're going to take a high dive into the shallow pool is monday's papers hitting the heads on the bottom? are two of my best friends . it's heads on the bottom? are two of my best friends. it's louis. you pronounce louis schaefer . pronounce louis schaefer. schaefer schober and peter . schaefer schober and peter. sorry, paul cox , guys, but sorry, paul cox, guys, but first, let's look at monday's front pages . the daily mail. no
11:04 pm
front pages. the daily mail. no wonder nhs can't afford union pay wonder nhs can't afford union pay demands . wonder nhs can't afford union pay demands. the i trust wonder nhs can't afford union pay demands . the i trust sparks pay demands. the i trust sparks tory turmoil over tax cuts . the tory turmoil over tax cuts. the guardian chief nurse warn over on nhs pay the. one hour later she vanished. menacing mum captured on new footage the times delusional trusts will votes tories fear the daily star. arctic brass monkeys. energy grid under pressure in polar plunge and those are your front pages . right lewis sorted front pages. right lewis sorted out you'll see there? yeah. okay, fine . have anywhere we okay, fine. have anywhere we turn on tower over intellectual. yes let us physically ferry it off . let's start with the daily off. let's start with the daily mail. well, the daily mail my favourite newspaper because he got the most news per dollar or per pound whatever in the daily business. let's thick still. it still has lots of stuff , plenty
11:05 pm
still has lots of stuff, plenty p still has lots of stuff, plenty p value, not even a pound. it's good value. i don't believe anything it says in there, but at least you have something here. a of it like what here. a lot of it is like what comes out your mouth. yeah, comes out of your mouth. yeah, that's not true. that that is a dump. anyway, so this is the big story. no wonder the nhs can't union demands. they're union pay demands. they're talking the this the talking about the this the nurses strike because there's a strike that the that they're paying strike that the that they're paying that the government is paying that the government is payin g £400,000 a day which is paying £400,000 a day which is like $1,000,000,000 a year or maybe good. must go in on that. yeah, i just did right now because i'm a anyway pay as i say what i, what i am. okay. all right. may we know what you think we know we can see it. they can. the brain is thinking and they spend it on private ambulances and for ambulances and taxis for patients . and because the tech patients. and because the tech because the patients in this country are used to public taxis , which is what's called ambulances. so i don't know if they're losing any money because , money. if it's they're losing any money because , billions money. if it's they're losing any money because , billions of money. if it's they're losing any money because , billions of you noney. if it's they're losing any money because , billions of you .oney. if it's they're losing any money because , billions of you . are '. if it's they're losing any money because , billions of you . are they:'s they're losing any money because , billions of you . are they are no billions of you. are they are they the tech, the ambulances
11:06 pm
that aren't running? are are they still paying for them? are not paying for the tax the ambulance. the point is it's more expensive private in this case because they're having to people on contract some ride so it's a half a million pound a day isn't it that it's basically been frittered away which should been frittered away which should be included in the system that we already pay for. yeah, that's the gist of it. i'm you know, i've been trying to form an on this. talking to lewis this. i was talking to lewis actually scenes and i've actually the scenes and i've been trying to form an opinion on for weeks now and on this for weeks now and conflicted because one hand, conflicted because on one hand, i know, everyone conflicted because on one hand, i havelnow, everyone conflicted because on one hand, i have the ', everyone conflicted because on one hand, i have the rightyone conflicted because on one hand, i have the right to ne conflicted because on one hand, i have the right to strike should have the right to strike or a at least means to be able to challenge something challenge their the their employers, challenge the government, whatever it might be. same time, i'm be. but at the same time, i'm i'm desperately uncomfortable be. but at the same time, i'm i'm despera servants, mfortable with public servants, particularly the nhs, being able to without a minimum to strike without a minimum level service . and i know level of service. and i know that, i know that, that can be misconstrued because that's what this trying achieve. this new bill trying to achieve. but flip that around, it but if you flip that around, it sounds like what they're actually trying to achieve is stopping people making stopping people or making it illegal strike. i'm
11:07 pm
illegal people to strike. i'm not conflicted about that because there should be because. i think there should be a level of service and a minimum level of service and just that that of just goes to show that that of thing is affordable. if can thing is affordable. if we can affor d £400,000 day for taxi afford £400,000 a day for taxi or whatever it might be, i'd only be too flippant. it this is very tomorrow could very serious. and tomorrow could be dangerous for the be very dangerous day for the uk. we just don't know what's going with both going to happen with with both and is the largest and nursing. this is the largest nhs strikes in history. so it's not just one part of the service going on strike, another part another day. this is the altogether it's a perfect potentially. well on one hand there won't be a storm not on one hand you know you think they should be allowed to go on strike on the other you think yourself how did we get into this situation to begin with why yourself how did we get into this donation to begin with why yourself how did we get into this do we)n to begin with why yourself how did we get into this do we have begin with why yourself how did we get into this do we have incredible why why do we have incredible inflation in this country? we have incredible inflation because money during because they dumped money during covid my god . it covid pandemic. oh, my god. it all comes and it all comes back now. they printed billions and billions of dollars causing inflation caused the situation. and who who promoted the pandemic . okay. so the point is
11:08 pm
pandemic. okay. so the point is it's not the nhs workers fault . it's not the nhs workers fault. they deserve to be fairly recompensed for their time to have had jobs. they should getting more money. the question is, is the money there? and that's the well that's what say but i think it is their fault. well if they're spending this 400 grand. yeah okay what has the front the times got the front page the times got paul so little bit more . this paul so little a bit more. this union's of risking union's accused of risking lives the nhs out . the biggest ever nhs walk out. and i do believe, as you were just saying to further that point, should be point, they should be recompensed but recompensed correctly, but you know, a contract we know, this is a contract we enter by paying on national enter into by paying on national insurance so don't really insurance. so we don't really have in this at the moment have a say in this at the moment and we have a say through and now we have a say through our vote. and, you know, we choose we choose, whoever our vote. and, you know, we chogovernment hoose, whoever our vote. and, you know, we cho�* government hoose, day ever our vote. and, you know, we chogovernment hoose, day is.er the government of the day is. but the same time, we're not but at the same time, we're not a there is no choice in this those people are having a choice and they're we're going to strike. want more but strike. we want more money. but tomorrow, my leg tomorrow, how if break my leg and i said might. was and no i said might. he was saying, well, you have money saying, well, do you have money tomorrow you said, tomorrow tomorrow as you said, tomorrow is for me. breaking is looking good for me. breaking my . and i worry about that my leg. and i worry about that next bone health issue. well, yeah, got friends in
11:09 pm
yeah, he's also got friends in some well, some dangerous places. well, i think think you're care think i think you're taking care of your poor health yourself. you're a very good to be you're doing a very good to be unhealthy, which is which is one of reasons is a good of the reasons why is a good point. i if we had point. and i think if we had a healthier, healthier populace, you quite healthy half the time and other half does but and the other half does not but you look horrendous. yeah i'm. the reason i mean, this is what's out of sight. you've got this is a diabetes. all will happen. it won't be long. but that's a good point. know that is a very good point and i'm not going to from the fact that going to shy from the fact that i lose a could lose a few i could lose a could lose a few pounds and. you know, you're absolutely right. there's huge absolutely right. there's a huge burden tell him how many burden on the tell him how many pounds could lose. i could pounds he could lose. i could lose bad access you lose the bad access can i you could say going to be in could say i'm going to be fit in mum's watching think you could mum's watching i think you could lose three so yeah maybe three and he really went there and a half. he really went there . no, no, that's not bad. is that a good guess? but see exactly could do with exactly what i could do with losing. about. be losing. yeah, i'm about. i'll be honest, about 16 stone and honest, i'm about 16 stone and that's not like . no, i weighed that's not like. no, i weighed 16 stone before i lost all of my weight. yeah. and do have
11:10 pm
weight. yeah. and do you have a girlfriend you have a wife. you have a wife think doesn't seem now that know now going into that you know that's go into another story that's go into another story that's think quite closer to that's i think quite closer to home for actually maybe a bit of walking might help his thinking about moving i move to motorists compare old fuel prices now this i this is going to affect i think this is going to affect people maybe a little bit more you you do long you drive than you do long journeys what i do and journeys and what i do drive and this a really fascinating this is a really fascinating story the idea that story actually the idea is that you buying you will any customer buying fuel will be able to compare instant only all fuel prices across uk, which is fantastic. we can do with almost anything except fuel prices. so when you're driving, i'm sure you do as well to i don't know if you do. lewis so i'm just i'm going to assume you don't know, but i'm doing a lot of assuming. but the end of the day, oh, don't allow me to drive then. i know because i don't have any money. allow me to drive then. i know becande i don't have any money. allow me to drive then. i know becand he ion't have any money. allow me to drive then. i know becand he has: have any money. allow me to drive then. i know becand he has no.ve any money. allow me to drive then. i know becand he has no. anywayfoney. allow me to drive then. i know becand he has no. anyway but,(. oh and he has no. anyway but, but i would say is this is but what i would say is this is fantastic consumers because fantastic for consumers because it to know where the it i'd like to know where the petrol stations doing that petrol stations are doing that so that bandra, i mean i, i know
11:11 pm
from but i'd to know from memory but i'd love to know which cheapest one was, which the cheapest one was, but can explain is can you explain how this is going to work? well, basically, this an initiative this is an initiative from northern i believe, northern ireland, i believe, where of the where they will play all of the different petrol stations. and it's the system it's ridiculous that the system hasn't because hasn't come into place because actually here they pay about actually my here they pay about seven a litre because of seven p less a litre because of the system because soon as you can now sort of check and go wait minute that down the wait a minute that one down the road much that it's road is that much that it's going and we've also going force. and what we've also seen way, petrol stations seen by the way, petrol stations here tend to do here is that they tend to do this thing where they'll quickly put up prices when the wholesale go they do a thing. go up, but then they do a thing. it's feather pricing it's like the feather pricing where actually. it goes down very slowly when their prices that their costs go down. so this what we've been seeing. this is what we've been seeing. and this the idea is that this will to those will force them to cut those pnces will force them to cut those prices earlier. how is how are they to find about they going to find out about this to be a website or this is going to be a website or i they're going to put it i think they're going to put it into law people the petrol into law that people the petrol stations have to send in stations will have to send in the information every and then they'll website they'll go on a website app essentially be part of you essentially it'll be part of you know, the cheapest systems that we're cost ourselves. we're using cost to ourselves. yeah look, there's
11:12 pm
yeah so look, there's another story trust, but story here about, trust, but let's to the metro lewis and let's go to the metro lewis and see how they're covering. well, i this like liz i mean, it's this like liz truss, she's she was whole i mean, it's this like liz tmean,1e's she was whole i mean, it's this like liz tmean, she she was whole i mean, it's this like liz tmean, she wroteas whole i mean, it's this like liz tmean, she wrote a whole i mean, it's this like liz tmean, she wrote a 4000 rhole i mean, it's this like liz tmean, she wrote a 4000 word i mean, she wrote a 4000 word article in the telegraph, which is than her actual reign is longer than her actual reign was . it you know, she spent 44 was. it you know, she spent 44 days in office and it took it took about 44. it was heavy heavy going to read her to make that earlier . on still my joke that earlier. on still my joke of all of that thank you spotting that thank you for those words. you know what i was thinking to myself? as i said, that's a really funny joke. i don't know the famous for stealing jokes it's i don't even recognise what a joke is. and i can tell you something about that. josh, he's a great guy. he's a great guy he's taking it very well. it's somebody stole his joke . i very well. it's somebody stole hisjoke . i don't very well. it's somebody stole his joke . i don't normally steal his joke. i don't normally steal jamie on national television anyway . she is, he was actually anyway. she is, he was actually right. i believe she was right . right. i believe she was right. bye bye. wanting to cut back cut taxes because that's the that's
11:13 pm
what the tories are all about. if you don't do that, you're not at all. what do you think is her being right? but at the wrong time? well, that also said earlier, but i think that is probably closer to it, to be honest. i when came up with honest. i when she came up with this budget, i the this mini budget, i like the idea like the idea. it's idea of i like the idea. it's such a step change because we needis such a step change because we need is going to have to happen at point whether it's at some point whether it's whether in guy's whether it's in this guy's another not for to say another it's not for me to say i don't think, but i don't think she i mean, not she totally wrong. i mean, not many the opportunity to many people the opportunity to write a 4000 word essay for what when get sack from the top when get the sack from the top job in the country you get printed. don't lose. all printed. i don't lose. and all the evidence she got the evidence suggests she got wrong. yes. you know, mortgage rate, mortgage rates went by 5. but i like her because she but she's i like her because she was brave. this a brave like you said. it's a brave , bold move to said. it's a brave, bold move to do what she and number two, it's a brave, bold move just a few months to come back into public life . well, there we go. that's life. well, there we go. that's the next question is why she doing this? you think she doing this? and do you think she realistically a political future ? i think she
11:14 pm
? well, i don't think she a political future under rishi sunak. political future under rishi sunak . no, i think quite clearly sunak. no, i think quite clearly . it's one of the rishi sunak has a political. well, yeah, he's doing well so far. 100 days now. well i know that's i mean come on the is it's like yeah it's like 3000 years old. no, i think , i think, i think she has think, i think, i think she has a future because, because when, when tories get rid of the left of the tory party yeah. when they will and they will when, when, when the tory party say . when, when the tory party say. listen when the tories have their trump which which basically makes the party fighting again. yeah. it's not fighting again. yeah. it's not fighting fit. let's see if she's still around in 20 years and when they come back into power there's a lot of and there's a lot of people in the conservative party really admire her. that's how she got there. i know. but there's a lot of people very much against. people also very much against. anyway, what about anyway, finally, what about friends, star poll? friends, the daily star poll? ask monkeys, arctic ask price monkeys, oil, arctic brass monkeys. so we're for brass monkeys. so we're in for a beast from. the east which another one? just fishing.
11:15 pm
that's russia again . but you that's russia again. but you know, the thing i joked with you earlier that we to have one of these stories every . yeah i'm these stories every. yeah i'm hoping that it does i like a nice crisp winter day before the spnng nice crisp winter day before the spring before spring better than the dull stuff but , you know. the dull stuff but, you know. let's see what happens to me. i this isn't weather to you though, is it? somewhere in america where you brought up? i was born on this every day in america, isn't it be america, isn't it? it can be that what pay for. that which what you pay for. it's wintertime. want it's wintertime. you want a cold, you don't want like cold, you don't want it like here, but the fact is here, which is. but the fact is that the beast from the east reason they call it the beast from east is because that's from the east is because that's where the coldest weather it's from if the from if it's comes if the weather comes from the south, it's warm. the weather comes from miserable. from the west it's miserable. okay, geography okay, thank you. geography teacher well, it's . you teacher. yeah, well, it's. you don't even know your own weather. this is know something josh? what's bad about josh? this is what's bad about this country. you think you know , on your tv news and i'm , on and on your tv news and i'm for these people they have no about the weather they don't know where it is. all we ever talk about. no you talk about
11:16 pm
you talk about. oh, it's not. it's a little bit rainy this minute. you don't know where it comes it's always comes from. it's always the same. isn't the same. and when it isn't the same. and when it isn't the same. okay. thank mr. schafer. yeah, that's the front yeah, right. that's the front pages done coming up after the we've sturgeon we've got nicholas sturgeon turns. massive, tough turns. she's a massive, tough house. spies from china a stealing your child's info and some hot new singles your area train tickets that is see you then.
11:17 pm
11:18 pm
11:19 pm
welcome back to headliners i'm josh howie and with my wingman, lewis schaffer and paul cox. ladies watch out. seriously watch out where we're all quite damaged. let's kick off with monday's daily mail. lewis, do you have any issues maintaining an election an election ? an election an election? actually, actually, i don't . i actually, actually, i don't. i
11:20 pm
don't really care. i'll see the difference in the political parties. but if you have a job to do right, you tell us a little bit of time. sorry about that. i just don't go about the story. let's move on. thank you. that's an interesting story . that's an interesting story. this is six out of ten voters, according to the daily mail, won according to the daily mail, won a general election year and more than half within six than half want one within six weeks, which is the statutory minimum have . look, weeks, which is the statutory minimum have. look, i'm minimum you can have. look, i'm not as big was i know this i've been and basically was been there and basically was a poll done by this redfield and wilton that says that wilton strategies that says that people because the conservatives are 20 points behind keir starmer's labour party they're doing badly and the labour party most people want an election right now i guess the conservatives wanted to get the pain done with and start fresh and the late and the labour. i don't think the conservative party knows what not the party, the people members. the poll is that any chance of going out an election there's not early as possible. there's no chance of him one because this is possible. there's no chance of
11:21 pm
hinmoment,»ne because this is possible. there's no chance of hinmoment, isn'tacause this is possible. there's no chance of hinmoment, isn't it?use this is possible. there's no chance of hinmoment, isn't it? yeah1is is his moment, isn't it? yeah that's the only reason he'll. stay until the bitter end, because knows it's curtains because he knows it's curtains for him and the conservative party . normally for him and the conservative party. normally i would make all the arguments would normally make not having snap and make for not having a snap and no because there's no longer valid because there's absolutely nothing good that we're doing be we're doing that can be destabilise by a general election in it's any time from this point on it's an election is a good thing. yeah it's chaos. i mean the interesting thing that i see is when see sort of pundits going on about how oh my god, if a labour government gets it, it's going to be doom this country. and to be doom for this country. and well, you think about, well, whatever you think about, laboun well, whatever you think about, labour, you've just got to go. we're kind already there. we're kind of already there. like could it really be any like what could it really be any worse don't think, i worse lewis i don't think, i don't. it can worse. and don't. it can be worse. and that's think i think the that's why i think i think the tories have the tories should have called the election just start fresh election and just start fresh and, and leave the burden to the labour party to clean up which they think they're going they don't think they're going to. that my fear of the to. but that is my fear of the whole thing is that we will get a new party and change is good
11:22 pm
but then going to if we but we're then going to if we then spend the next four years bleating none bleating about well, none of this and i'm not going this is awful and i'm not going to have to because going to to have to because it's going to be lot of problems and they're be a lot of problems and they're talking spend talking about continuing spend their in opposition their time now in opposition talking about the solutions and it's to implement it's very to implement the solutions. they've but solutions. so then they've but the i will then the worry is i will then spend four well it's not four years saying well it's not possible of the, the possible because of the, the problems us problems the tories left us with. they but the with. yes, they did. but the reason we're voting them in whoever it might be, is because we want okay, democracy let's do it. guardian next. maybe it. the guardian next. maybe stryper be stryper cops might actually be less real cops. full less dodgy than real cops. full i to be fair is a great i mean, to be fair is a great analogy because it probably would be true officers prior convictions and close links with criminals are among hundreds who have joined the police in the last three years who should not have been allowed in according head of police watchdog now mean there was an argument that all police inherently close to criminals and it's an occupational hazard. i mean there were two things going on. one of the reasons we've employed so many police in the last three years is because we
11:23 pm
desperately trying to get the numbers from they numbers back up from when they decimated ten years ago, when it was and therefore the gates was in and therefore the gates are open and the checks are the checks are a lot less . let's checks are a lot less. let's face it, the met are a mess at the moment every other week there's a story about a new wrong'un that's been discussed and they're not just slightly wrong. they are mega wrong. and with i mean this latest guy and how many how many he's admitted 24 rapes. i mean , how can 24 rapes. i mean, how can somebody with a lifestyle like that find their way into the police? and i think because because the checks are less it those sort of people. well i mean he's been part of the service arguably for a long time. so it shows the rot really goes quite far back, you think, louis? well, i think this is this is a situation . any job this is a situation. any job people who get into that job are usually not for that job. that's why they go into the job, they're working on themselves, speaking about from personal experience. would that experience. yes i would say that most comedian that i've met are
11:24 pm
not really that far . yeah. not really that far. yeah. present excluded. that's present company excluded. that's and i would include in that thing whenever you see a comedian say is that guy funny how many comedians do you know not funny they're working on not funny but they're working on it. i think that's what you it. and i think that's what you have with the police and what they're trying to is they're trying to do is eliminate all bad. i mean, eliminate all the bad. i mean, the department, 42,000 the police department, 42,000 people and a couple of. yeah, the met the one in texas huge. and if one in ten of and yeah and if one in ten of those are dodgy you know those are dodgy that's you know 42 and we how many you're going to ask these people and they have a jobs work in a factory. how many of the people at the factory good employees. factory are not good employees. how at the bank how many people work at the bank or whatever shop is. i don't or whatever the shop is. i don't think that they are responsible for safety around and in positions of authority. that's amazing. think that i think you cannot eliminate you can try to eliminate bad ones but i think it's impossible it at 100. it's impossible to do it at 100. i try and eliminate you i will try and eliminate you right sundays times louis you right on sundays times louis you like don't you. well, i like singles don't you. well, i don't understand this story . like singles don't you. well, i don't understand this story. i was about that. i know
11:25 pm
was joking about that. i know i wasn't. i'm just happy that you i wasn't listening to your joke. you should pretend to be more enthusiastic. sorry enthusiastic. okay. sorry you say guilt. i felt say to guilt. suddenly i felt like you and like picking on you and everybody . because we have a everybody. because we have a thing. because we're the same sex or whatever. so kind . maybe sex or whatever. so kind. maybe it's maybe a sexual. sexual somatic. who knows? because maybe . yeah, i suppose. yeah, maybe. yeah, i suppose. yeah, i just. i don't , i don't want to just. i don't, i don't want to be like him. he's like the. no, no, no, no. actually, i'm not going to myself. okay, anyway, let's go with. sorry, sorry. well, because government is involved in everything in country, they've country, they are they've decided return tickets they decided that return tickets they should be eliminated for passenger hours on the trains that you should be forced to buy two singles, which i always thought that's what do when thought that's what you do when you tickets, it's basically you buy tickets, it's basically the pnce you buy tickets, it's basically the price singles. the same price as two singles. it's not discount for a return it's not a discount for a return ticket. generally am right? ticket. generally am i right? no, no it's you can get cheaper as a return like it only sometimes it's like £1 more for the return day. yeah, £1. but generally speaking, it's not that much cheaper. what is paul
11:26 pm
say. well, a no, sorry. no, no, no. i was just going before. so i just want to make the point that know and you may be making this is the our our train system heavily subsidised by us to the tune of billions. so essentially paying tune of billions. so essentially paying it and now they want paying for it and now they want to take more money from us because you can just say this is going to. okay sorry is that is the way the system was given out is wrong they gave individual lines okay but that meant there was no competition. okay so that's what i'd like paul to take up that point because the point is exactly that there's no competition. the competition. what's the difference. that difference. they're saying that it's like, oh, this will be really good because this allowed them to train companies to against them all. you read this story you realise it story the more you realise it doesn't of the doesn't solve any of the problems two new problems it creates two new problems it creates two new problems ways problems in many ways it's restructuring the way a passenger will pay for tickets, which actually isn't that bad. i mean, on mean, i buy train tickets on a weekly and that often weekly basis and that often suggests you the cheapest possible price journey possible price for your journey which is great and you know it's
11:27 pm
already expensive so thank you very the other is it's it very much the other is it's it says restructuring how rail says it's restructuring how rail were run but what it's doing is not removing any of the problems which are all the individual silos . let's sit down here but silos. let's sit down here but it's creating another middleman that sits between the dft the department for transport and those providers that are going to set a direction. i don't see how that's going to fix anything. and the main problem is how to, you know, how operate these successfully or in these things successfully or. in my to how deter people my case, to how deter people from sitting next to me on the train. yeah. well, paul, thank you much. actually at least you so much. actually at least summing which summing up that story, which louis do. let's go to louis and i to do. let's go to the daily next a big protest taking place glasgow for taking place in glasgow for common absolutely i'm common sense. absolutely i'm really glad we're covering this because i haven't seen a lot of this covered on any of the other news channels, to be honest, i've only heard this news i've only heard this on gb news so. well done gb news women's right cain right campaigner kelly j. cain posy parker. those who posy parker. to those who remember, thanks nicholas
11:28 pm
sturgeon ironically for waking up at glasgow rally row over transgender a price and now i love this story. not for the impact by the way the serious impact by the way the serious impact it has trans people which is very negative but i love it for the way that it's for the first time sister massively dismantle the idea this perpetuated by people like nicholas sturgeon that this is a very simple matter for the want of a better word it's binary matter. you are either accepting trans women , women or you're trans women, women or you're not. and you're either wrong or you're right. and it's simply not the case. you know, i mean, how often have have we asked politicians what a natural woman is ? and i've not been able to is? and i've not been able to answer that question. these problems us that , well, i problems tell us that, well, i certainly wouldn't want them in charge. mean, charge. yeah, but yeah, i mean, lewis, i. do you think the other political parties paying attention because of nicola sturgeon's her you sturgeon's dropping in her you figures supporting her. i think are sitting back and i think the labour party is the second largest party there in in in, in
11:29 pm
scotland and the green party is huge there as well . so i think huge there as well. so i think it's not as it's not as if these issues are going to go away and it's like we've won basically. but the issue , the issue that's but the issue, the issue that's really big here and why this is so good is that is that basically women cannot say anymore , we are the same as men anymore, we are the same as men because that's what that's what this trans issue has. it's women for years been saying we belong in men's space and now men are saying we belong in women's spaces . well, it's that, you spaces. well, it's that, you know, the cause of what, a double who no was a counter only male rapist going it's a women's jail that it back to yeah because women for years been saying we are alike and now men and not me but now but now men can say we don't want women coming into our spaces. we need safe spaces. this is interesting. i mean, i thought
11:30 pm
something somewhat similar. interesting. i mean, i thought something somewhat similar . the something somewhat similar. the poll this is the beginning of now us actually talking about that sort of this stuff. do you think this going to widen the conversation? absolutely and lewis is right. people at the other parties are stepping back . i mean, you all you heard there was lewis is right here. what he said after that. but you are right . what he said after that. but you are right. but i would like to see starmer in to see keir starmer in order to smash election time smash the election next time he's to have to answer this question properly. and that's what from what i'd like to see from a labour party that will show that he's listening. i don't know. keir you are keir starmer if you are listening, you're listening, if you're all watching, everybody watching, please, everybody knows that you sort this knows that you just sort this issue a big issue out. my point is a big which listen to lewis . no, my which is listen to lewis. no, my point is a really point. it's suddenly women saying we are going to say as men you get to be a misogynist again. okay, that's the situation . stay tuned that's the situation. stay tuned for some meaty misogyny and why i want you to tell like , okay, i want you to tell like, okay, you know, and why you can get up and go, i've got a teenage boys get up to the woods. oh see what
11:31 pm
i say . there's lots of goodness in there. and there. how does the goodness get in? is it in the air? whoa!!! yeah!!! or the rain? thunder/mooing or in what they eat? actually... - meat and dairy- naturally contain vitamin b12,
11:32 pm
which helps us get energy from food and stay healthy. wow.
11:33 pm
11:34 pm
welcome back to headlines it getting straight to it with a story in monday's times and teenage boys just can't catch a break paul oh that's right why me too fallout is wrecking the lives of school boys ahead of a new tv drama. can't for this a new tv drama. can't for this a new tv drama about consent experts say an excessive crackdown leads to pupils being shunned or expelled. this particular expert is a lady by the name a psycho therapist by the name a psycho therapist by the name a psycho therapist by the name of julie lynn evans. by the name of julie lynn evans. by the way . and she makes a good the way. and she makes a good point here . i think this story point here. i think this story in general is something that is a growing problem. we're seeing a growing problem. we're seeing a lot of good creating bad problems . so a lot of good creating bad problems. so reading through this this this is about to
11:35 pm
specific things, really. one, about the metoo movement and, one about the web service, which is called help me out everyone's advice. everyone is invited, which on the face of it is very good a proactive thing but it is essentially about pointing out and naming and shaming and in many cases teenage boys for inappropriate slash behaviour. now the reason i don't to defend thatis now the reason i don't to defend that is obvious. but at the same as someone who's been alleged. well it's also so straightaway straight they're tarred with this brush . okay, now we have this brush. okay, now we have all been teenage . it's all been teenage. it's a difficult to jungle navigate now. it isn't difficult not to be a sexually deviant, but at the same time is difficult to know how to express , how to know how to express, how to manage those feelings. and everything is now taken as a negative . every interaction has negative. every interaction has taken this negative . and as soon taken this negative. and as soon as you say, yes, this guy and that becomes public, that guys lives yeah. i mean lives over. yeah, yeah. i mean louis, what do you what do you
11:36 pm
think it look, think about this is it look, it's a balancing act. is it because let's not pretend that teenage aren't teenage boys teenage boys aren't teenage boys who do carry out some of these things , sexual assaults and things, sexual assaults and whatnot . but there are also whatnot. but there are also innocent teenage who are sort of dragged into it seemingly unfairly, certainly according to some of the stories here. well as i've said before on this channel, it's the death of love . and i think this is part of what they're trying to do is what they're trying to do is what what this is part of basic preventing people from finding love by making every social sex interaction dangerous and very risky dangerous when we were talking earlier the metro now and lewis another story about teenage putting their wood where it's wanted. well this story is as a lot more or less than you think it should be. it's a teen order to pull down the den , the order to pull down the den, the woods, because they didn't get permission . and i thought to
11:37 pm
permission. and i thought to myself, oh, they put a couple of maybe branches that are falling of a tree, maybe, you know, a couple of sticks together. no is thatis couple of sticks together. no is that is that down in beer east? yeah. there it is. look at that. i mean , it's better than my i mean, it's better than my flat. yeah that's. it's got a golden yeah. that is not a that is not a den. it is a it was built on a concrete slab, it has a fire pit and made out of wood pallets. it took three months to build and. then once it's there, it has the right to continue forever. well, one if they don't say anything if they don't tear it down well surely this is actually a good thing. i mean, this shows it shows that developing that skills it's a bit sad for it to get knocked down should be commended, i down they should be commended, i think. mean, these are think. lewis, i mean, these are the boys in the the only teenage boys in the whole uk. the only fans whole of the uk. the only fans of drugs in the garden of drugs in the back garden building . a 10,000 last time you building. a 10,000 last time you heard of teenage boys or girls out in woods building a ten. an impressive ten. i mean, i noficed impressive ten. i mean, i noticed a few structural issues so they could do with a few
11:38 pm
pointers but. at the end of the day, think is fantastic day, i think this is fantastic yeah, this is what they should be their chalk. be doing with their chalk. i mean council obviously nuts mean the council obviously nuts . yeah. they've had one complaint and that's it complaint and that's that's it is 16 years old. is going on their 16 years old. yeah well i know for space you want to invite me as i recall for somebody saying you know what, the answer's no somebody should have said no, that's a bit much. okay, let's have look at the daily mail now and paul, it that the language police are better funded than the actual police. oh my , goodness. oh, my police. oh my, goodness. oh, my god. right . there's police. oh my, goodness. oh, my god. right. there's going god. that's right. there's going to quite of this story to be quite a bit of this story because i think provides quite a lot of context. but i'm not going speak for don't going to speak for hours. don't worry. and phrases worry. there words and phrases that been part of the that have been part of the engush that have been part of the english language for centuries. we them. but now jump we all know them. but now jump the with punches the gun roll with the punches and even deadline are a new on our new ultra woke list as terms to avoid they are considered to violent to violent instead safer alternatives are suggested for
11:39 pm
example that'll two birds with one stone being replaced with that'll see two birds with one stone. it doesn't make any sense . it makes absolutely no sense . . it makes absolutely no sense. someone said that will fade to with one stone. i get some. i would some violent language. well exactly and you will remember that we will remember phrase sticks and stones will break my bones but words will never hurt me. it wasn't just a nice, polite little rhyme. it a little life lesson about and we seem to chuck stoicism out at some point . louis this actually some point. louis this actually is from a company. she's the, you know, the diversity person for a company called phenomenal x . i think for a company called phenomenal x. i think maybe for a company called phenomenal x . i think maybe they for a company called phenomenal x. i think maybe they might for a company called phenomenal x . i think maybe they might have x. i think maybe they might have been better spent that time coming up with a decent name. well, you know what they'd give ? they get for the state ? they get money for the state of california . the that of california. and the idea that you can kill birds. well feed two birds with one skull, i think only in california. would they know what a what is going is a classy people is it
11:40 pm
damaging someone at the end of the article basically argues that this the language can cause because it it's making you feel guilty for associations that you don't necessarily already have like language using like you know kill once and suddenly it's like you've been actually sinning your whole life . the sinning your whole life. the thing about this is that language changes anyway, whether the government has anything to do with it. well, they over time they'll be stopped being used because these phrases because some of these phrases are not to be used. yeah, we've got stop forcing things. we got to stop forcing things. we know. name's miranda and know. my name's miranda and louis. women have pulled louis. three women have pulled out jeremy clarkson. out from jeremy clarkson. all right, got that for. right, have i got that for. yeah, , jeremy clarkson hit yeah, well, jeremy clarkson hit with megan backlash as . three with megan backlash as. three female stars refused to go on that that who wants to be a millionaire? i actually actually didn't. what that i do warm up i didn't. what that i do warm up i did warm up for who wants to be a millionaire in america one tie is impressive with with what's her name what's so beautiful and what's his name which you would think. oh yeah that one now
11:41 pm
youtube now he's in america regis philbin. regis philbin. if you're watching in america. i think it was it was high watermark. and anyway , they watermark. and anyway, they don't want to work with him because. he he wished meghan markle dead to be dragged through the streets dead. and how have you said dead? you just said and no he said i think he said and no he said i think he said dead. we'll have to find out specifically reference to him wasn't that that i think it was just dread did not dream. wait a minute i'm wait wait a minute i'm hearing wait a minute getting this from minute just getting this from the there screaming. i the producer there screaming. i mean, say die. he mean, he did not say die. he didn't say that he paraded naked the streets and dreams . it was the streets and dreams. it was only naked through the streets said okay then and which is and people got really upset. the truth is nobody likes her in country anyway. so why are people getting upset at that ? people getting upset at that? but i think why people really got upset at him is because people actually thinking this. that's why if you it was like
11:42 pm
they were feeling guilty and they were feeling guilty and they projected. yes. because it couldn't have been a joke because they would want this woman . what do you think, paul? woman. what do you think, paul? is cancellation was is this cancellation was cancellation . it was a bad joke cancellation. it was a bad joke . and we've all written those. but people are enjoying it. and the only people they're enjoying are people hate are those people that hate jeremy chose jeremy clarkson. had he chose a different target, we wouldn't have about it, of have been talking about it, of course. the right to course. i mean, he the right to free and, right to free speech and, the right to write but then three women write that. but then three women have the right to turn down a platform with him . yes. they platform with him. yes. they could see why would hold up could see why it would hold up a whole show. truth . and whole tv show. the truth. and then he apologised for all three of yeah i would do it. of stepin. yeah i would do it. i dress up as anyway the point they want viewing figures be they want the viewing figures be that to dominance is that high is to dominance is that high is to dominance is that he is that he okay louis having a stroke. so what is it a final story in this section. it's monday son of louis should delete, ticktock and do know what ticktock is. i what tick tock is. i don't want to tick tock is. i don't want to tick tock because i think the chinese are running it and that's the
11:43 pm
point of this they want they tick tock to be deleted and they're asking people to tick they're asking people to tick the tock instead of the delete tick tock instead of just banning it. why can't just ban if it's so dangerous to ban it if it's so dangerous to the of britain and they're the youth of britain and they're accusing the chinese people of spying british people which shows the uk. paranoia because we're not that way me the british are not that boy i called it. i said, boy , that was called it. i said, boy, that was his favourite mistake. yeah. what you think about this? well, i think this fails to mention that all social media spying on us and tracking us. so there isn't a there's a single good guy. all forms of social. guy. i use all forms of social. i spy on you on social media. exactly. yeah, exactly. i mean, nobody nobody is changing their policy based on what i do on social media, all the internet, as josh. but it does as you know, josh. but it does fail mention that facebook, fail to mention that facebook, twitter, . they all do twitter, instagram. they all do exactly the same thing . we're exactly the same thing. we're all, you know, i guess the problem arises when it's young children, teenagers start engaging with us both. josh i have got children of a similar
11:44 pm
age and it's a difficult game to play age and it's a difficult game to play because you don't want it's part of their it's part of our ecosystem now you know you're making unpopular if they making them unpopular if they can't engage with you you can't engage with you do you allow daughter to allow her to tiktok actually so it's limited to great but i know i know you and we've had this discussion before and you are and this isn't just for tv. you're genuinely surprised by that. and i think terrible parents and yes. might well be but yes. yes, it might well be but but at the end of the day it fills anyway it's like everything like allowing them to have drink at home. yeah. you know you've , got to kind of know you've, got to kind of allow them to allow her to drink. she's drinking and talking you see she's 12, she's talking you see she's12, she's 13 and she loves a drink and, a bit of heroin. listen, i my kids to watch tiktok because they're 20 and 22. yeah another great thing complete coming up in the last descent madness we've got resume liz sleep deprivation and the lewis shafer facebook group
11:45 pm
so you .
11:46 pm
11:47 pm
11:48 pm
think welcome back to headliners let's jump back into monday's times and a facebook group solely dedicated you. lewis well , why do you pick on me for this ? but i actually know something about this kind of thing. there's a facebook group that asks, are we dating the same guy? it's women to check up on the that they're dating the guys that they're dating with. on facebook it's with. it's on facebook and it's all across world in america all across the world in america . it's been basically . and it's been basically wherever you've been . but but wherever you've been. but but the truth is the truth is why is this a problem for women? it's it isn't the problem because women always date the guy. they don't want to date a guy, a boyfriend they want to date a guy with a boyfriend. if a guy have a girl, this has nothing to
11:49 pm
do with this story. it mean complete with talking about this is a website so women can check on the guys that they're matched with . yeah but but the point is with. yeah but but the point is they don't meet the check up because they know every single guy i've ever been with dating somebody else what are you think. but that's not the story . the story . it's the story . the story. it's the story that's the story. so they might be looking for the same bloke with the same characteristics . with the same characteristics. but in this case, yeah, they are all appearing today. exactly same guy and they're using facebook. yeah. to identify if that's the case by sharing images that are wrong, i mean none of us have probably used no internet dating so we're all well , you know, internet dating so we're all well, you know, unfamiliar territory for us but i assume these women are sharing data. they're saying, you know, i went a date, we did this. he said that he like this, whatever. and then we go and that's the same i'm dating. i mean, we do with this global politics this sort of global politics really. my point. really. that's exactly my point.
11:50 pm
do going stop any do you think going to stop any woman any woman from woman by the any woman from dating guy? no, i do. dating that guy? no, i do. i think if enough red flags come up with this guy, it turns out he's married. i dated. yeah. because that report that because that sort of report that goes into red, he said me , goes into red, he said to me, then out he just you then it turns out he just you could tweet. me at lewis could tweet. tweet me at lewis schaefer . that is not a red schaefer. that is not a red flag. joe woman. the idea that a man has lots of choices when lewis schaefer single when i was single do you think i had anybody interested me. oh he's single he's also on the bar for gb news. if you do tweet . lewis gb news. if you do tweet. lewis schaefer we have no responsibility or connection . so responsibility or connection. so what happens, ladies and today's male next. and she'll miss the point of this story. male next. and she'll miss the point of this story . and should point of this story. and should you lie on your resume , which you lie on your resume, which i'd never do, my native american background . how is temple . yeah, background. how is temple. yeah, there are five lives. lives lies you should never tell on your resume. according to experts who worked with lewis schaffer . worked with lewis schaffer. lewis schaffer warned that you could be fired if new boss found
11:51 pm
everything out. so you're saying the whole crux of this and is later on this argue lying one lying one suggests you will lie again. i don't know what this obsession with the truth is you know who is who is the paradigm here? who is the benchmark? because know all the all the most successful in both our countries are the biggest bestest liars we have all come across and some of them can't even tell you what what female is what a woman is. they can't can't tell the truth about anything. so why are we being measured by some other paradigm ? yeah, we wouldn't. lewis seems like the one group people who can lie and they won't get the police. yeah, they lie on that tv. he's not going to get away with it. well it's, it's also we have a man in america this is george santos who the representative from my old district. and he was lying about everything. member everything. they had a member from place who said he from from this place who said he was jewish and said he was doing
11:52 pm
the holocaust. who wants to pretend jewish? famous pretend to be jewish? famous jewish . that lie. and you jewish. that is a lie. and you know what? totally away know what? he totally got away with he got 11. it was a dry with it. he got 11. it was a dry supposedly. there was photos of them triangles. i don't know. them in triangles. i don't know. yeah telegraph next. and about how but how important sleep is. but stick least stick with us for at least another couple of minutes before do lewis quickly go do go to bed lewis quickly go the this is the very the story. well this is the very this is you know what the truth is i had trouble reading it myself because we know exactly what that less than what the story is that less than 6 sleep is bad is 6 hours sleep is bad okay is there any little bit of factual information in the telegraph story. no it's all association and this is problem with today's with science today is everything is association. they don't do one random controlled trial. they don't random control trials or made two when it mattered. they did whatever it is they don't use it. they basically say, you know, we've noticed that people who don't get a lot of sleep get cancer. we know were given a lie on some data, but one in 50% of all people get cancer. but one in 50% of all people get cancer . yeah, i mean, cancer. yeah, i mean, statistically and, even if they
11:53 pm
do get 6 hours sleep, are going to get cancer. yeah. or this or that. or you can the case that that. or you can the case that that maybe it's the cancer that keeps people up at night, but what's the chicken or the egg situation people. do you get enough sleep? it's difficult. know our job is to read the news . yeah. you try sleep after you've read the news day it. but i am going to conscience. i don't have a for the ages. you as well. if you don't get enough sleep and you're what 23. yeah. yeah 24 actually you know i'm 24 but at how great look and but look at how great i look and i'm very bad sleeper. i'm a very bad sleeper. so finally have daily star finally we have the daily star and americans do british and can americans do british cuisine? let us ask our resident pastie smasher , lewis shafer. pastie smasher, lewis shafer. well, this is an interesting story. the american diner here a diner launches a british menu with and t though no matter who we call pasty, which is something to be pasty is something to be pasty is something completely different . something completely different. but punters spot a problem the problem is that they they left it's physical chippies so assume
11:54 pm
that there'd be a chip in there chips but we don't call it chips but they left out fish and chips. you think that's a problem it's a problem of translation. well i don't think anybody saw this into a chippy . anybody saw this into a chippy. maybe that's they probably thought that's guy's name thought that's some guy's name is chippy so do you think is a chippy so what do you think about would you be tempted about this? would you be tempted to establishment, to go to this establishment, this cultural this whole thing, cultural appropriation? oh interesting. i am by this whole am triggered by this whole stuff. i could barely it. i couldn't see any so i can't even at it. i want reparations and chips. but i like having a good car . they got nearly everything car. they got nearly everything right. it just didn't have fish and chips on there and not our best man, is it? it's i'm just wondering how, do you think it would do you think it's a popular or is it do you think this is going to take off and start like a whole like well, perhaps way. it was a lot famous for our food. oh well, there was a big chain of fish and chip restaurants owned by british actor treatment actor called off the treatment that big the 1960s that was very big in the 1960s and and i people lost
11:55 pm
and 1970s. and i people lost interest in it really. i mean they didn't it was it didn't really fly to the sky or the fishes creatures, fish and chips. wow okay. that was a you obscure as an obscure reputable fox finished the show . thank you fox finished the show. thank you so much lewis for sending people to this little bit earlier so i could save them from some so you've been so critical amy the entire show. can't you pretend to like me? i love you. principal photography. so see the tension between the quick look at monday's front pages. i get love from from polo get more love from from polo shout out the just can't afford union demands the i trust sparks tory time all over tax cuts. the guardian chief nurse over deadlock on nhs the times delusional trusts cost votes tories fear the daily star arctic brass monkey's energy grid under pressure polar plunge woo! there you go. thank very much to my very good lewis schafer. my very good friend. thanks, guys. i was a lot of
11:56 pm
fun. i hope you enjoyed that. headune fun. i hope you enjoyed that. headline is back tomorrow. 11 pm. is simon evans the event ireland and france is also and if you're watching at 5 am. because you have a real job stay tuned the breakfast show tuned for the breakfast show coming fight .
11:57 pm
11:58 pm
11:59 pm
at six oh on mark dolan tonight in my opinion. liz truss launches her comeback with an explosive new article in the daily telegraph and i share her view that britain to end a culture of tax and spend the country needs a dose of tough economic love . it dose of tough economic love. it might take it ten. finally a prime minister who serious about stopping the boats. rishi sunak's showing surprised courage by threatening to axe the hated european court of human rights. my ma meets guest his former cabinet minister buckland. plus tomorrow's papers on my all star panel will live .
12:00 am
on my all star panel will live. at nine. welcome back. i'm karen armstrong in the gb newsroom. fresh of nicola bailey on the day she disappeared have been released by one of her friends. the cctv images from a doorbell show 45 year old wearing a long, dark , loading her car outside dark, loading her car outside her home before driving our children to school and going for a riverside walk like cheshire. police believe she fell into the river wire. but a forensic search and rescue specialist peter folding says many elements of that theory add up. nicola was last seen in the top field by that, by the witness. you know, there's nothing to say. she couldn't have been kidnapped and dragged and put in a car and taken away and. and someone could have put a mobile phone by
12:01 am
the as a tick or nicola the river as a tick or nicola wanted to disappear

53 Views

info Stream Only

Uploaded by TV Archive on