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tv   Headliners Replay  GB News  February 21, 2023 5:00am-6:01am GMT

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you with gb news. it's 11:00. and in you with gb news. it's11:00. and in a moment headliners but first let's bring you up to date with the latest news headlines and lancashire police this afternoon that the body discovered in the river wyre yesterday has identified as the missing mother of two nicola bulley. the body was found a mile away from where nicola disappeared three weeks ago dunng disappeared three weeks ago during a morning dog walk and was found by members of the pubuc was found by members of the public the cause of death hasn't yet been revealed . a police yet been revealed. a police liaison officer read out a statement on behalf of nicola's family . a nikki you no longer family. a nikki you no longer a missing person . you have been missing person. you have been found . we can let you rest now. found. we can let you rest now. we love you always have . always
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we love you always have. always will we will take it from here here . meanwhile, the chief here. meanwhile, the chief constable of and cornwall police called firearms law to be reformed tonight after an inquest jury found people were unlawfully killed in a shooting spree near plymouth in 2021. five people died, including a three year old girl in a shooting carried out by jake davison . the inquest today heard davison. the inquest today heard how 22 year old legally held a shotgun certificate but was obsessed with firearms . a lawyer obsessed with firearms. a lawyer for the victim's family says there's been a catalyst of failure. devon and cornwall police the system has hopelessly failed us in particular, the devon and cornwall police force has failed us. the evidence we have heard during this inquest over the past weeks is a consistent story of individual failures breathtaking
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incompetence and systemic failings within every level of the firearms licencing unit of the firearms licencing unit of the devon and cornwall police . the devon and cornwall police. well is away from home. president biden has promised more than $500 million worth of aid to . that's after he aid to. that's after he a surprise trip to its capital. it comes just before the first anniversary of russia's invasion on february the 24th. last mr. zelenskyy , the visit was an zelenskyy, the visit was an extremely important of support for all ukrainians. the us president said his country would stand with ukraine as long as it takes. stand with ukraine as long as it takes . putin thought ukraine was takes. putin thought ukraine was weak and west was divided . as weak and west was divided. as you know, mr. president. i said to him in the beginning and he's counting on us, not sticking together. he was counting on an ability to keep nato united is counting on us not to be able to bnng counting on us not to be able to bring others on the side of
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ukraine. he thought could outlast us. i don't think he's thinking that right now . and thinking that right now. and lastly, in consumer news, superman markets are facing a tomato shortage after bad weather in europe and africa disrupted chains. in morocco heavy rain, flooding and cancelled ferries have affected exports the past 3 to 4 weeks. and in spain, the winter tomato crop has also been badly affected by poor weather. the british retail says they're managing chain issues and are working farmers to ensure produce returns to the shelves as soon as possible . that's it as soon as possible. that's it for me. you're up to date on tv , online and dab, plus radio . , online and dab, plus radio. this is gb news time for headliners . headliners. thank polly. hello.
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welcome to headline . i'm simon welcome to headline. i'm simon evans. tonight i have a josh, howie and leo to take us through the go lot with the schoolyard backbones of the show. you've been described this and i don't even know what that is that's anatomically co—ed school this is a lateral curvature of the spine. oh, is it okay. so i said good thing that you stole your take that was ironically, i suffer from kyphosis which is which is just the normal curvature but just right in hand.so curvature but just right in hand. so the person just sort of heartless. yeah they're actually discriminating against me and i'll be raising it with with each other are good for you i wish you well that could be a nice little christmas bonus . so nice little christmas bonus. so anyway look anyway let's take a look at tomorrow's pages. we start with the daily bring it up. tomorrow's pages. we start with the daily bring it up . we've got the daily bring it up. we've got it. let's meet jamie bell. there it. let's meet jamie bell. there it is the daily mail area, the daily mail. niki can let you
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rest now as we just saw in the in the news bulletin, that was nicola bulley has been remains have been discovered and a family to some degree of peace have send jets to ukraine truss johnson tell the prime minister the paper has his family accused shameful tv crews and social media. the guardian has failures you don't to be seeing these pictures, do you.7 but you don't to be seeing these pictures, do you? but you'll have to take my word for it. the guardian. catastrophic failures led to plymouth shootings. we'll be taking look at that shortly. the times brexit deal may trigger sunak is and finally the daily star with battle of the bfg . it is grisly and hurry bfg. it is grisly and hurry august to gobble with words and we must stop squabbling. i those are the prime minister's words anyway . were your front pages .
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anyway. were your front pages. so we became the daily mail. yeah they're leaving on the front page with the body of nicola bulley being apparently a psych said he found a big didn't . there seem to be a lot of cranks and jumping on this we've seen you know people on social media there and trying to solve it the selves and really turn it into into bit of a circus which you know must be horrible for the for the families already a terrible story without you know people people making it making it ridiculous and also the police came out and amid that you know bizarre are a statement issued alcohol problems. yes menopause to disagree with hormonal imbalance. how is that going to help find her? it seem seem and i hope, you know, if i if bad ever happens to me they don't come out and start revealing stuff oh revealing stuff about me. oh he's addicted self—pity and he's addicted to self—pity and it ridiculous comments it it was ridiculous comments it was was almost up his bum. was it was almost up his bum. you know there's yeah know it
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was almost as if they were it was almost as if they were it was almost as if they would they were provoked themselves by a lot speculation and they felt lot of speculation and they felt under attack . right. for not under attack. right. for not having made any progress. under attack. right. for not having made any progress . and so having made any progress. and so they were trying to demonstrate and we know lot more about and we know a lot more about this than you think we do in, for instance, for women, it was like we couldn't have summit in the i mean pretty basic the fact i mean was pretty basic information was just personal information it was just personal information i don't know. i think police did pretty badly. what do think about this what do you think about this psychic sounds psychic business? just it sounds like horrifically like that's just horrifically unnecessary. yeah how is he going to be this support? i mean, i think it was this person was the person who found her right on a walk . now was the person who found her right on a walk. now he's was the person who found her right on a walk . now he's saying right on a walk. now he's saying that he's a psychic, right? yeah i mean, i can't imagine using that in some way to bolster his . it's not there. it's kind of like a small lad, bodies found or something, you like a small lad, bodies found or something , you know, come to or something, you know, come to come to pete. psychic think it's just a your body look carbon . just a your body look carbon. yeah oh it's been very very
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awful the business and i know it's upsetting. i know he's upset my own wife so i can imagine i can extrapolate across british womanhood that have a sense of how utterly to make me extrapolate across british women from my own wife . i have josh, from my own wife. i have josh, if you got anything more cheerful on the front page of the guardian? probably not. well, yeah, there's a picture of biden's surprise visit to kyiv , biden's surprise visit to kyiv, andifs biden's surprise visit to kyiv, and it's a good photo . if we if and it's a good photo. if we if we look there is it sort of looks like a sequel to red heat. yeah. like 50 years later on, he's lost a lot of weight. yeah, they're out there. he's come back. one of them still the same age, but the other one's changed quite a lot. yes quite a lot. but he's the bad cop. i like the way they're in front of this kind of gold capped white palace, though it all looks very kind of gold capped white pala
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essentially a swamp. yeah, right. i think that sort of like that. when you was the original which was the original russia wasn't it the russia's point is well is it's not this they're good but yeah he so just popped up out of nowhere supposedly the white house decided over the weekend as go road trip. yeah yeah and no one knows how we got there really least of all him. i think it's maybe teleporter. yeah, well yeah. the world of hologram stuff. i mean, that technology back from us. what you wrote about there? yeah. matthew sweet, write a tweet about that. that was a joke. matthew sweet, the way. he's standing there. he looks may have been lowered from some sort of from just like on to of rope from just like on to a skull. it looks like a cut—out. he does not behave like a colourful cut—out giant here supports . but colourful cut—out giant here supports. but as he said, anything new is surprising, don't it's? i suppose he's because of moscow and sorry has been just saying that the west their support is fading and op pumps pumps topside and. yeah i
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had to go well we're here and we support him so you're wrong i think nothing the west support actually increasing and we're delivering better and better weapons and you know we can smell victory now and see a necessary victory is if russia even gets a toehold in ukraine, then it will be a signal to china that. yeah, you might as well go for taiwan because because we'll let you . yeah. because we'll let you. yeah. what about this catastrophic failure is business. yeah so the these the dreadful shooting that i think it was about five years ago now and five people were, were killed with a shotgun and it turns out that essentially there are these, you know, these licences are given out essentially and they were meant to checking people. but it to be checking people. but it turns a couple of months before that he had the licence or whatever . he actually beat a 16 whatever. he actually beat a 16 year old unconscious. whatever. he actually beat a 16 year old unconscious . and at year old unconscious. and at that point, you would think the police would like there would be something a computer go something on a computer would go across. a minute. the same across. wait a minute. the same guys, shotgun, you know. well,
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guys, a shotgun, you know. well, i'm take that away i'm going to take that away from them. didn't so them. yeah. and they didn't so them. yeah. and they didn't so the was this like the shotgun was this is like a it was presumed for sort of country sports it rather than, you know, you don't apply for one to hold up post offices. well exactly. you know, they're talking tough and they talking about tough and they don't put that for yeah don't put that on the for yeah it's my so this is quite it's my so this is from quite some time in fact this is some time ago in fact this is the inquiry that's happened now that again failures of the police that could have arguably prevented these charges does seem to happen a lot doesn't . seem to happen a lot doesn't. the cross—reference the failure to cross—reference does that does not happen that often i think you know we've got we don't have that many gun deaths licence country deaths from licence no country mainly is from from gangs who don't get getting them licence. so you this to be is quite so you know this to be is quite punitive on people who have them for valid reasons and. also there's there's bit of an there's a there's a bit of an irony having something calling for gun control. for a much tighter gun control. next to a picture of biden in ukraine where he's delivering guns to everyone. yeah. you what can we a guns good or guns but i mean i don't understand i'm i'm
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not sure you can draw a meaningful comparison those two things you seem to be quite in favour of arming anti meaningful . i would like everybody in ukraine needs a gun bill it kind of air i mean you know i say the comparison is with recently when it was discovered that the metropolitan police it failed to nofice metropolitan police it failed to notice that a member of their own force had had a you know a history of sexual offences before he actually committed the horrific rape and murder . that's horrific rape and murder. that's the kind of thing this kind of cross—referencing but then they don't to be able to do it even you know if you like your car licence and you and your car tax , your car parking are all on three different databases. so thank lord. yes, absolutely true . the daily telegraph. leo yeah. so this is back to ukraine. bofis so this is back to ukraine. boris johnson and liz truss are pressure on rishi sunak to send fighterjets pressure on rishi sunak to send fighter jets to ukraine to
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russia's credit. he's pledged longer range artillery and longer range artillery and longer he's i think guided artillery as well, which is really useful for the ammo dumps and, things like that because russia is russia's them further and further back to sort of state the range. so that's great. and also know across europe is sort of galvanise in russia is really still you know following on from boris and galvanising the to provide them with ammunition and armaments but you know you know they're looking at more serious things you know fighter jets this is more lot more expensive and more a lot more expensive and i mean a lot of the stuff that we've had already doesn't cost us much to them because us much to give them because it's old in storage. so it's old that's in storage. so really saving by clear, really we're saving by clear, you know, some storage units and we're money by giving we're saving money by giving it to longer to missiles that no longer sparked joy . yeah when we looked sparked joy. yeah when we looked at something else hopefully those sparks you russian soldiers but but yeah i mean this is i think the needs to needs to get on this it needs give them the tools they need to decisively finish this because they're stringing it out at the
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moment which is leading to unnecessary deaths. but it does take three years to train these pilots. i pilots. yeah that's what i was thinking. we're either thinking. i mean, we're either going give pilot or going to give them pilot or we're looking at a longer term this is not quite the same as aiming anti—tank missile, but aiming an anti—tank missile, but the not the bit that i think's not amusing about. is the idea amusing about. this is the idea that is sort of come to that trust is sort of come to make a claim. it's like trust, come on, you don't get to say some was defence some of this. she was defence secretary before . yeah, whatever secretary before. yeah, whatever she and i would agree with you said that she is on the front page of done so i don't know. there is this sort of weird sense isn't there, that it's not settled yet. there's half of the tory party still think there's another this, although another round of this, although terrible lot them terrible memory a lot of them are. well prime are. yeah, well the prime minister i she was a great minister i think she was a great is never a leader. okay when we have just finish have the metro just to finish before picture of the before the so the picture of the cut there and then junior cut out there and then junior talks to strike doctors is short for doctors. mm i'm not much and yeah so this is they've gone i
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think it's 98% of their of the people who did vote for this and i there's a sort of it's a bit of a stereotype about junior doctors how they're incredibly the long hours they do essentially underpaid. it's a trope . yeah it is a trope, isn't trope. yeah it is a trope, isn't it. i tv series sort of based on this whole so they're going to walk out for three days and they want a 26% pay rise which seems like a lot but i actually think they're salaries are pretty. yeah. a lot smaller than you think certainly after studying for seven years and having people's lives in their hands. you think 30 grand? i think it is like that. they're still learning on the job probably. and then you know, make it. and then you know, they make it. they move to proper, you they can move to proper, you know, a first world country. but money, they're also know, a first world country. but monof. they're also know, a first world country. but monof the they're also know, a first world country. but monof the many they're also know, a first world country. but monof the many backbones.o know, a first world country. but monof the many backbones , the one of the many backbones, the nhs. then gone for three nhs. and then gone for three daysis nhs. and then gone for three days is going to cause some of the older adults is going to actually to work . some of actually have to work. some of the consultant there's the consultant comes, there's not, many them. not, there's that many of them. so would just give so if we would just give a decent pay rise, could be
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decent pay rise, it could be goodit decent pay rise, it could be good it could be good publicity for way yeah, we're for the nhs that way yeah, we're trying get it done . we do, we trying to get it done. we do, we do. but everybody gets do. but then everybody gets a 26% pay raise and then we're in this inflationary spiral and then you know, we're in then before you know, we're in then before you know, we're in the way republic then the way my republic and then the far come power and we far right come to power and we saw who i think it's junior saw who i think it's just junior doctors then us well doctors 26 and then us as well that's the front pages exhumed. after the break. we'll find why you can turn your heating on just in time for spring. why bankrupt is assume going to be a thing the we'll see thing of the past. we'll see a couple of minutes .
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welcome back to headline is with me evans leo kearse and josh howie. so leo we start with good news for the chancellor in the telegraph you might even say it's a bit of a windfall, in which case you should probably taxing self, right? yeah. give
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it. give us some back. so jeremy hunt, chancellor has been hunt, the chancellor has been handed an £11 billion budget boost fall to boost as gas prices fall to their lowest level in 18 months. so putin isn't just losing the war ukraine. he's he's lost war in ukraine. he's he's lost the energy with with europe the energy war with with europe as you know , he thought as well. you know, he thought because we've got so much of our gas quite, a large gas and quite, quite a large amount our from from russia. amount of our from from russia. he over a barrel of he could he had over a barrel of crude and you know, cut crude and could, you know, cut it off to us then we'd all it off to us and then we'd all freeze now. and it turns out because of climate change has not this winter. is there not cooled this winter. is there anything climate change can fix? so that is that. let's see why. because i haven't managed to see why is it because the demand hasn't been as high as they expected. yeah, it's not been as high as expected. also we've russia natural russia with liquefied natural gas certainly you we've gas certainly you know we've we've ramped the we've suddenly ramped the ability terminals to sit ability of the terminals to sit and paper around europe so yeah i mean to our government's credit, you know the tenable in a lot of things but they've done well in those they've reopened the storage north sea the gas storage the north sea but at the start of the winter .
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but at the start of the winter. it looked like we were going to have energy subsidies that were going to cost a huge of money as the gas yeah. short of an the gas price. yeah. short of an energy subsidies ridiculous energy subsidies are ridiculous idea prices idea anyway, the gas prices going because there wasn't enough too many enough gas and there's too many people so if you people wanting it. so if you keep if people can all have the same amount, i mean, they can't have amount. defeating have the same amount. defeating the mechanism. that's the price mechanism. that's how the price mechanism. that's how the the the market works. but yeah, the total was , was estimated to total cost was, was estimated to be just shy of total cost was, was estimated to be just shy o f £40 billion and be just shy of £40 billion and it's to be that much. it's not going to be that much. it's a mere 26 it's it's a mere 26 billion. it's still be a lot of money still going to be a lot of money that could have been that passes could have been spent on nothing and we could have just it ourselves and have just kept it ourselves and spent on what want and spent it on what we want and what going to spend yours what you going to spend yours on, well, unfortunately not on, josh well, unfortunately not going billion. it's going to be 11 billion. it's only be about four only going to be about four because is going to be because 7 billion is going to be taken from the taxes that taken away from the taxes that they government would they that the government would have the gas they would have got the gas and they would have got the gas and they would have the. so 34 billion have sold the. so 34 billion trust, josh, to bring it all to me cloud over it said we were just about enough for a few large are going to need this government then go for 4 billion and about a minute. yeah that's
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three days of as i said let's trust premiership josh we have the mail now this feels like much more solid ground for angela rayner still hasn't learned first thing about bear traps while exactly i saw you tweeting about this yesterday . tweeting about this yesterday. yes labour gets itself in another transgender tangle . as another transgender tangle. as deputy angela rayner says . it deputy angela rayner says. it doesn't matter if trans double rapists bryson has a penis dunng rapists bryson has a penis during grilling over whether attackers should be in a women's prison. so this was an interview that was in the sunday times. i thought it was a very good interview. it can head. yes. and i thought she and i thought, angela rayner came across really well. i didn't know a lot about her backstory and definitely she's overcome some hardships and almost i mean it's almost borders on the ludicrous just how hard her life was just one thing on another oliver twist after scale yeah absolutely. and full of respect what she's achieved and then right near the end of the interview the thing
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comes up and she just falls apart and she cannot give proper answers because of course there's still this ridiculous line of, you know, trans women being women, essentially , being women, essentially, essentially defending the rights of this double rapist, male rapist or at least putting them on a par with women's safety. yeah. and it's like, of course, we this person deserves to be safe this double rapist, but the same time, not in any way , but same time, not in any way, but not not to the level of like at the cost women's sense of safety or real. the thing about this is , i mean, it's been going for , , i mean, it's been going for, on i don't know, 18 months, two years or something in the scottish. obviously, the transition has been going for on than that there's ample opportunity for politics to kind of address the fact that they were caught up in a in a cognitive dissonance state they committed a certain line of thinking without , realising that thinking without, realising that it would come in its own time .
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it would come in its own time. but they've they've entered the stage now where they're confabulation like somebody with a, you know, with a severed. yeah. what i mean like, like, you know, when the, when the brain has there's an operation on the brain and half of it doesn't understand what the other ideology is other is. leftist ideology is never held back by reality . i never held back by reality. i mean, look at the soviet union. millions and they still say no, this is good motor. they're saying we should shut all saying no, we should shut all the sparrows create a the sparrows it'll create a utopia though they makes utopia even though they makes the famine worse. so underestimate the ability of leftists to throw bodies under, under the wheel of whatever right wing people can also do that as well. no. well there is there is definitely the capacity for human beings to funnily enough, there's guy think enough, there's a guy i think his is called connor fitz his name is called connor fitz something from he's talking about the way the consensus shifts in ireland specific ireland he says is a smaller population there is a greater risk of being cast out of society . if you go against society. if you go against consensus essentially know a lot
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of people live in what amounts to a large village there you know and, so and so a kind of a surface of consensus can be sustained for a long time after it's rotting below the surface. the catholic church. exactly is the example he gives, you know, which was maybe 40 years ago. now, some of the finally way almost overnight from being a virtual theocracy i mean, it was almost on a level with iran wasn't half the way west suddenly. yeah how labour suddenly. yeah yeah how labour haven't learned the lessons the snp. yeah. where have labour in scotland voting for this self i.d. bill. you've got labour in wales voting. yeah still trying to put it through after seeing what's happened in scotland. it's like i don't want benefits. no, no. palpable benefit that i can see. there's no the bill because the voters don't want it. no certainly not a majority. you it's extraordinary. anyway, staying with transport is in the metal poll trans murderer eastwood is worried she might be moved to a male and in an adult facility despite identifying a
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baby. is this right? yes. this is a transgender killer who killed inmate. while she will, he or she was was in prison and now identifies as a baby scottish prison and presumably wants to get moved to the step she she has i'm going to say she because she has actually transitioned right and she necessarily okay because she's wearing lipstick . okay well i wearing lipstick. okay well i think in 2023 has politics but she is an abuser does is in a female prison now right. i think out of five trans prisoners are there for murder. yeah oh, what we have for fight of trans prisoners in female prisons. are there for murder. and he he he was then. he's certainly on controversially strangled a fellow with a shoelace. yeah that's as you do that's i mean it's . oh i don't know. i will it's. oh i don't know. i will tell you big fan of also there was some some really minor dangerous driving . yeah just dangerous driving. yeah just just before they got on i like
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it and just if i see them a baby got to bring me baby food and rub my belly. yeah, yeah. that thatis rub my belly. yeah, yeah. that that is right. i mean , obviously that is right. i mean, obviously a threat to inmates , not a a threat to inmates, not a threat to male inmates that killed a male me. so they're definitely a threat to female and the whole baby thing. i mean, why any of this indulge prison is it somewhere be prison is it somewhere to be indulged a place to be indulged prison is a place to be punished. yeah and hopefully you know, spanked a bit . know, spanked spanked a bit. yeah. you're lucky if you you're allowed to identify as a reader . aren't you in allowed to identify as a reader .aren't you in jail to remain allowed access to a book. yeah you know, if that's the kind of privilege , whatever sexual privilege, whatever sexual fetish point of this is, when transition they said that they were sexually being in a male jail . that is a serious were sexually being in a male jail. that is a serious problem . there is an issue of trans prisoners being sexually abused in male jails. that's the problem . the solution isn't to problem. the solution isn't to then put into a females where potentially they could the threat. the solution is to deal with it within the male estate and make sure they're protected
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. that's how i would zip them up into a really tight rubber suit so that they couldn't be molested by other prisoners. they probably enjoy that. but about this with just one little pipe about this with just one little pipe for breathing , josh, back pipe for breathing, josh, back to the telegraph now. we are inching ever closer to . the inching ever closer to. the utopian dream of every financial transaction being electronically launched. transaction being electronically launched . gosh, bank branches launched. gosh, bank branches turn away , customers depositing turn away, customers depositing cash. turn away, customers depositing cash . so we have now three banks cash. so we have now three banks in the uk where you you there's no money there, there's no physical there. they're they're sort of almost like business hubs where you would go in for a meeting about, mortgages or whatnot. also whatnot. yeah you've also got this other phenomenon where. banks closing different banks are closing different branches around the country, so they're sort of doing hub branches where you where whichever branch you belong to can use those facilities can go and use those facilities . this is a larger trend in . and this is a larger trend in they've ditched cash at 71 of they've ditched cash at 71 of the banks in ireland of its hundred and 70 locations in sweden. there are hundreds of bank branches. now a cashless. this is the way things are going
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but of course that is a danger to people still cash to people who still use cash even though saying it's even though they're saying it's going like 6. yeah it's going to be like 6. yeah it's going to be like 6. yeah it's going isn't it? it's going fast, isn't it? it's interesting because obviously stand comedy , probably one of stand up comedy, probably one of the trades anyone the last trades whether anyone gets paid cash in hand, it's us and gardeners and tree surgeons as know, know many, so many as you know, know many, so many cash backs. bank cash their backs. yeah bank transfers. you do notice it transfers. you do notice how it is it feels slightly odd. is like it feels slightly odd. now if you go out just with cash . i lost some bank cards. i had my stolen and i found loads of pubs don't take cash. yeah central london. there are loads of places can look for free. yeah well, he's just off to dealers anymore. yeah. really? yeah. that's nice . let's get yeah. that's nice. let's get constructive when are taking the tap , you know, the contactless tap, you know, the contactless thing. but it's. yeah, it's. well do that now. right. you're going london underground buskers you can tap your car you don't see that kind of show as well. but the danger is we're moving towards a digital currency which can be completely controlled. it's logged. yeah, it's not just logged. yeah, electronic that you can electronic at least that you can see social can you know
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see with social can you know this currency it can be given a time limits. you got to spend it within weeks, it can within two weeks, it can be given geographic it can given a geographic area, it can be restricted to only being spent on certain things like a record voucher given to you by the government. only be the government. yeah. only be spent prog. yes yeah . if spent on prog. yes yeah. if i ruled the world. that's all for this section. after the break. we have white pastors , student we have white pastors, student tosses , and in the other sense tosses, and in the other sense of the word, what is phone neck. we will out shortly, say in a minute .
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and welcome back to headliners. so leo. we have the guardian now within news for anyone who thinks social media is rotting our brains . so facebook and our brains. so facebook and instagram users will soon need to pay to be verified and get that blue tick as martha follows
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in the footsteps of rival platform twitter . in the footsteps of rival platform twitter. phil in the footsteps of rival platform twitter . phil facebook platform twitter. phil facebook said one of their things was like always free. we're always going to be free, of course until we're not until we need some money and all the money, all the capital's run out . all the capital's run out. there's no blue tick approach on facebook at the moment. there is just that right? yeah. i don't know what the process is. instagram definitely has obvious appued instagram definitely has obvious applied for a blue tick and right. i was refused on twitter as well, so i didn't ask. i was too . but people say i don't lose too. but people say i don't lose either of those very much . but either of those very much. but instagram is very business, isn't it? apparently that's the place to go if you want to sell something. they say instagram. yeah well, depends what you yeah well, it depends what you want you want to want to sell. if you want to sell clothes. things sell women's clothes. things like that or. yeah. things, then. ground. then. yeah right. the ground. but you to sell a but yeah, if you to sell a collection of the world two figurines, probably , figurines, then probably, probably not. but yeah, this, this is apparently twitter has come under commander because no you've got to pay to get the verified cash and the two step
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verification where they send a message to your phone. so apparently companies were exploiting this and setting twitter accounts and they made $60 million from sending the making twitters and the sms messages . oh, right. because you messages. oh, right. because you actually can make people to actually can make people pay to send a message. you you can send you a message. you you can force twitter to you force twitter to send you a message yeah, yeah. oh, got it. so it's a traffic endlessly. ellen has i think on the whole it's a good thing but he has kind of i mean, he stir things up and i understand that he's trying to streamline it. he's also bungled a few things as well. but it is interesting to see after everything happened, a lot thought, oh lot of people thought, oh my god, going drive god, he's going to drive christian into the instead. yeah, his main two rivals are now basically following in his footsteps in anyway the guardian snow. josh with the rain over, dan's rumbles on like a big fat witch on a harley davidson. but so rishi sunak joins criticism changes to the roald dahl books . they put out number 10, put
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out statement , basically doing out statement, basically doing stuff from which which was which one of the books that we win we shouldn't gobble. funke i don't know which big is it? okay yeah, which i would have thought actually, because he reminds me i wanted to say this, but he's quite short. so what characters he like . yeah, he's like he like. yeah, he's like matilda. yes. so but yeah. so different people are stepping in interestingly old his dark materials . interestingly old his dark materials. philip pullman. philip pullman has come out on radio four just said you shouldn't those should be sacrosanct but actually they should be left to fade and die i have some sympathy with that . have some sympathy with that. i'm not actually a huge fan of pullman when he fulminate one way or another . i pullman when he fulminate one way or another. i mean, i don't know. the question is, will they. yeah. people choose. yeah, we'll the choice. no, we'll have the choice. no, people are going to go and buy roald and it's rewritten by roald dahl and it's rewritten by some and this is some apparatchik and this is rubbish don't do. this rubbish and they don't do. this
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isn't wrote. isn't what roald dahl wrote. i mean. like the, you mean. imagine like the, you know, going and rewriting beatles songs or something that it's i didn't it's disgusting to me. i didn't grow does. not grow up on roald does. i'm not sentimentally attached. can grow up on roald does. i'm not sent angry|lly attached. can grow up on roald does. i'm not sent angry|l|would:hed. can grow up on roald does. i'm not sent angry|l|would bei. can grow up on roald does. i'm not sent angry|l|would be if can grow up on roald does. i'm not sent angry|l|would be if they how angry i would be if they were to try and fiddle with winnie the pooh or something, which there for which did love it there for a bit. younger children, it is pretty you do love roald pretty clear you do love roald dahl pretty clear you do love roald dahl. love roald dahl for dahl. you love roald dahl for his writing. not his writing. not just not not not for the concept of some witches who triggered by witches who get triggered by because not massive because they're not massive cry—babies who've been drugged in this leftist ideology. but the point that pullman makes, i think , if i understand think, if i understand correctly, is there are correctly, is that there are lots young authors coming lots new young authors coming along naturally into one along, are naturally into one with the kind of sentiment that these houses presumably appear to this sort of rubbish. well yeah, but they're obviously to dislike them just publish them. and if you want something that's kind of a bit woke and sensitive to current, then by then i mean if you don't like them and then somebody, you can buy some roald dahl somebody, you can buy some roald dahl. so books again josh over to mirror now they have a story some tweets about the baftas
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yeah bafta sparks among appalled viewers . all three of them who viewers. all three of them who play viewers. all three of them who play in all winners a white so essentially the full winners of the main acting categories were white but then last year, the winner of the best actor winner was will smith and. it was a there was a female director last year and i think actually is quite a large of ethnic ethnic minorities were represented in this sort of nominated you know, they were nominated, i think, about a third, which is overrepresentation in arguably. yeah, but but none of them won in fields. yeah. and it's like come they've, they've made they've, they've had like a, they've, they've had like a, they've had a thousand new members join bafta. they they implement all these policies. you have to prove your diversity to get your film even nominated . but at the end of the day sometimes this is just the way that it's going to be. that doesn't prove well it's going to
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the industry's racist and the more they complain next more they complain course next year winners , black year if all the winners, black or or whatever somebody or asian or whatever somebody toby is very reasonably toby young is very reasonably going well, course they going say, well, of course they had to vote for them. now i'm actually the best. they have to vote otherwise ever. vote for them otherwise ever. now i don't so if now around i don't so if anybody's about lack of anybody's upset about a lack of diversity and baftas, just wait until the outbreak . yes, i'm until the outbreak. yes, i'm just to just two points. i think one of the nominees is was angela bassett the supporting actress and black panther kind of reva. that's a terrible movie. yeah, she's a great actress . she's not good in this. actress. she's not good in this. she play tina turner? yeah, yeah . and amazing in that. yeah but she is rubbish in what? of forever, like a sort of caricature of her all of her mannerisms. right it's a really bad film so. yeah. idea that nominated for it. well i'm just i'm just saying like it's ridiculous michelle yeoh with that she's she's she was excellent in everything everywhere write like i yeah and she's great in it is she the best actress said no probably it
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probably did justifiably go to blanchett for thor which which is which is a great movie and she's well it was 2040 minutes i'll never get back but leo the daily mail now this story provides an opportunity for me to launch of my innovations seeking a developer. i'll let you lay out the land first. so doctors of technique. this isn't the same as remember brassai had that thing called check nic that you got from from eating that made method based drug called made up method based drug called cake. yes this is a real thing technique. so apparently we spend on average 5 hours a day scrolling on our smartphones, which insane looks like half your waking day . you know, it's your waking day. you know, it's quite a lot and so is creating huge medical issues. yeah as you lean forward and it puts up huge medical issues. yeah as you lean forward and it puts u p £50 lean forward and it puts up £50 of pressure on your spine and is causing you all all kinds of problems people are having needing surgery because of this there's a thing called a neck
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which involves incisions around the ears and hair pulling to tighten underlying muscle and remove excess excess . that remove excess excess. that sounds more like plastic surgery, like cosmetic doesn't make you look younger. yeah good. i'm to look. i can't do it again. i i do get it sometimes if i on a journey or something, you know, like an hour of it suddenly notice you've got a headache your and your neck aches. yeah. and you think that is definitely because have been trying used to trying to it's like he used to be old school punishment know be an old school punishment know standing arms standing there with your arms out you know leverage yeah he's an extraordinarily thing you're supposed it level supposed to hold it level with your eyes. well this is my your eyes. yeah well this is my suggestion, know, suggestion, because, you know, you selfish that you have selfish sticks that people to a bit of people use to get a bit of distance camera. so i think distance on camera. so i think you one too, for. you just need one too, for. right. have like propped right. but have it like propped into slide show i into your belt. slide show i guess. well exactly. i was guess. yeah. well exactly. i was thinking that people marched with flags in front of parades , with flags in front of parades, but yeah, like this is what i get about the store. a little helmet with a dangling. yeah. what about there's something called . people used to
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called books. people used to read yeah, but then you read books. yeah, but then you go that just saying like go over that just saying like the this is some new the idea this is some new phenomenon a book phenomenon. you read a book before? it's supposed to before? yeah. it's supposed to different people don't read books hours a day. they do books for 5 hours a day. they do they they're conscious they don't they're not conscious how everything . well how slow everything. well i think do have think about think we do have to think about this i personally would like to see some sort of innovations that that would change the that would that would change the way interact fans and way we interact our fans and i think possibly like the vr headset is a way forward headset thing is a way forward so can be scrolling so that you can be scrolling here see it, you'll here and you'll see it, you'll see your and everything see your hands and everything on the can just be the phone, but you can just be sitting the hope to see sitting with the hope to see what so you think the what i mean. so you think the solution to having too much weight is the big weight on our neck is the big helmet that also eliminate all of the as well? it's just totally. okay. josh i news totally. yeah. okay. josh i news now and bad news if you want to study and have a bed for the night. yeah absolutely. university students are squatting or sofa surfing as rent out strips loans in most uk cities . yeah, this is slightly cities. yeah, this is slightly anecdotal evidence for me anyway, but various members of my family who are off to
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university and their friends are all panicking and they telling me that actually people studying in manchester are living in liverpool because they cannot get accommodation cheaper to live in liverpool. that's only way they can. the people who live in france work in geneva. when that happens of the when that happens a lot of the un apparently think the rents are much. so it's a real are that much. so it's a real problem in all of these major cities the are only going up cities and the are only going up by like 2.8. but actually accommodation is going up between to 10. and to be honest, you don't it's real bind you don't mean it's a real bind because you kind of want your loan to go out that much because. you're going to have to pay because. you're going to have to pay back it's not you pay it back and it's not you know, not free interest know, it's not free interest these don't know these days. yeah, i don't know what is. i mean, what solution is. i mean, i think maybe they should allow again the market to again the allow the market to kind sift these a little kind of sift these out a little bit. but the the market, bit. but the market the market, because red tape because it's stymied by red tape , so no one's new , nimbyism, so no one's new buildings , nobody new high buildings, nobody wants new high rises and high density housing in the back yard. but in the in the back yard. but it's needed for people to live spatially as we're living , you spatially as we're living, you know, a million people into the
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country you know, the country year, you know, the students of students probably in favour of massive of immigration and open so that is something and also what you saw is there is some truth to that one of the problems with the university heating in particular is that it has a certain, isn't it? if you're if you're just looking for a job, kind of go for a job, you might kind of go where the rent and job, you where the rent and the job, you know, salary and the rent to know, the salary and the rent to some extent, imbalance. but you think going and go think i'm not going to go and go to third rate university to some third rate university just avoid know this is just need avoid you know this is my there's no point in my life and there's no point in going to university unless you're you know, it's you're doing you know, it's something proper law or something proper like law or being something. being a doctor or something. there's in there's no point going in studying diversity . that's studying diversity. that's amazing. get hundred amazing. if you get hundred thousand pounds a year. but a diversity in the i mean only study at six months was worth. yeah so as soon as could thanks this section for down joining us for the last time a couple of minutes a woman knows a place a man finds his place on the toilet and we find some impressive roman wood . we'll see impressive roman wood. we'll see you in a couple of minutes.
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welcome back to headline as so leo to end this program we have one last section will kick off with the male a lifestyle choice that would been pretty unremarkable and my house growing up certainly has become an actual news story now . so i'm an actual news story now. so i'm an actual news story now. so i'm a traditional housewife. i love spending hours cooking and cleaning for my husband. i'm subservient to him, but in a healthy way. but enough about me. there's a new story here . me. there's a new story here. and now this is a woman in richmond ashley richmond virginia, ashley williams . richmond virginia, ashley williams. she's 25 and she's dubbed herself a tried wife . and dubbed herself a tried wife. and this is a meme that i've seen in various places on twitter and stuff. so she stays at home baking bread, cooking meals from scratch, cleaning and learning to clothes and husband to own clothes and husband connor goes out as an electrician, then goes hunting for food on the weekends. they've this phil full of
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they've got this phil full of food says she finds food and she says she finds fulfilling role. women they've fulfilling a role. women they've posted things like this on posted about things like this on social media and said, i actually enjoy this this lifestyle and having a more sort of tradition or role they think it's by all these women who are like, oh, you're not you're not a feminist. you're you're letting us down, blah, blah, blah. and then they obviously go and two bottles of red wine and take some anti—depressant spray and sex. there is there is a slight i mean, just look, this is a big photo story. obviously, she's quite attractive. she has traditional curves and traditional sort of curves and dress sense and everything. it does look a little bit i don't know faked up. you see it know faked up. did you see it did you like i did. that's did you look like i did. that's why i. there's loads of pictures of her of with one heel out and you see like kind of kneading and stuff. but i don't know how old she really is. she says here his response, he doesn't have any responsibilities at home than heavy lifting and, hanging out pictures. now i my wife out pictures. now i make my wife do of that. yes. know that's do all of that. yes. know that's real traditional . my wife has real traditional. my wife has a two man jobs which she for
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anything that i should have done she's actually had to do just always there's a stench if i go into the house and a lot of man have been left on my wife and she did exactly the same. she took over the diy recently because i was sort of like, you know, get to i'll get to it. and she's basically taught herself and i'm like, i that old and i'm like, i love that old joke with ladies. if if, joke with you ladies. if if, if a man said he'll do, he'll a man has said he'll do, he'll do he doesn't need reminding do it. he doesn't need reminding six that's a great to six months. that's a great to ask staying a male and everyone's favourite table hazard has been seen outside his school without is absurd prosthetic breasts. so my favourite title headline for today is intersex with z cup breasts spotted dressing like a man outside school insists they are real and he has a rare condition which she caused him to grow. but she has never got a so there has speculation for a while now that this is in canada. this is the person these ridiculous they're about now
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£2,000 and that's not the weight that they're expensive and in which they're like a health and safety hazard. and there is speculation that before this person came with these big breasts. yeah actually, they were very kind of anti the whole work. they canada and this person has now been saying it's been seen basically without the wig and so it looks like a protest it looks like a protest, in which case what a genius. yeah, i he's living the life but now he's claiming that he has gigantic mass still which apparently is a real thing where your breasts suddenly grow to huge size . not usually on a man. huge size. not usually on a man. yeah. no i mean, i should imagine . aren't this is this is imagine. aren't this is this is from a man. i'm not a doctor but they think i think i deserve a 26. i want to know what his end game is. do you think he's looking financial? do you think he's hoping get sacked and then susan was it's malicious compliance to just show how big he was the ideology is malicious compliant so like that it's like the new gandhi like civil
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disobedience is the film they make about him. ben kingsley . disobedience is the film they make about him. ben kingsley. he left free. ben kingsley is wouldn't you three three bald heads. wouldn't you three three bald heads . the wouldn't you three three bald heads. the guardian now leo has slightly less worrying signs of emasculation than we've seen in the laboratory still. so, yeah, this is the splashback scandal should . all men sit down to should. all men sit down to urinate . i mean, to throw away. urinate. i mean, to throw away. put this in the guardian. i'm so readers sit down to urinate already this is in germany. the column sits sits has been closed there's been a court case there and 2050 in the court in germany ruled in favour of a man's right to urinate while standing after the landlord had complained that was marble or was discovering the marble or something in his bathroom file . something in his bathroom file. but yes men generally about 70% of men stand to urinate and. it's seen as, you know, effeminate or not masculine to sit down and urinate all of those men at night. you don't need to turn the light on, which is great. that is true. yeah, but. but they're saying there's,
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there's, there's bad thing you do six pages on this account. i can't believe people thing can't believe people only thing i i mean i stand know i would say, i mean i stand know probably will years is but but the only thing will say is i think you don't really lies quite how much splashback there is in certain situations until have you ever used to urinal like a stand up urinal ensure it's yeah it's extraordinary how much comes back straight onto your legs it and you don't realise i don't know it's the same is like if it's spraying out of a toilet bowl as well. probably not as poorly in the sopranos. such as shoelaces, right. yeah so yeah, but there's also the just read the most, the best sentence in this he says i should probably also say that though i've been talking about men applies to anyone with men it applies to anyone with a penis golyar. men it applies to anyone with a penis golyar . oh times now we've penis golyar. oh times now we've to get through a couple more stories before we close for the night. the sounds like someone is trying to make archaeology seem a little interesting than it is very, very filthy . it really is very, very filthy. roman tool was used for pleasure
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actually found this about 30 years ago. this bit of wood essentially , phallic shaped essentially, phallic shaped wood. and they thought it might have been something called adorning for use for donning . adorning for use for donning. oh, yeah. you push it into a sock to it, a bit of shape. so this will maybe go somewhere else. yeah i'll give it a bit of a roman sock. yeah. and and they're saying now actually it probably might have been the first ever phallus of kind is 2000 years old. yeah. i it would give you splinters this suggests it might not have been used the full sort of sex toy form rather. it would be used to enhance a statue in touched for luck. well that's why i use mine is it. yeah. touch it for the so going to get arrested . finally going to get arrested. finally we have 10 seconds for this one leo banksy is having a positive impact on people's lives so banksy did a spray painting mixed a real life abandoned freezer . margate, then the freezer. margate, then the council rushed along to pick it up because they'd been exposed to banksy. it exposes them. so
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now the locals are doing it to other other fly—tipped junk the council aren't getting this fantastic. i we saw the fantastic. i think we saw the stories that quickly the show is here let's take another quick look tuesday's pages. the look at tuesday's pages. the daily has nicky we can let daily mail has nicky we can let you rest now telegraph has sent to truss and johnson prime minister the paper has nicola bulley his family accuse shameful tv crews on social media. the guardian has catastrophic led to the plymouth shootings. the times has brexit deal made trigger a resignation sunak told, and those where your front pages. thank you so for joining us for tonight's show. thank you to leo kearse and josh howie for remaining upright and straight spine throughout headune straight spine throughout headline as is back tomorrow with myself once again and josh once again and roger and a whole load of new stories if you're watching the 5 am. repeat. good morning stick around for the
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breakfast show coming next. otherwise, have a good night's sleep. goodnight .
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the family of nicola bulley say she can finally rest as her body is formally identified and given morning at 6:00 on tuesday, the 21st of february. this is breakfast on gb news with eamonn holmes and isabel webster leading the news this morning. the devastated family of nicola bulley have described her as the centre of their world after the mum of two whose body was recovered river wyre. recovered from the river wyre. the night calling for the press and the public to be held accountable false accountable for false accusations , the prime minister accusations, the prime minister will chair cabinet today amid

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