Skip to main content

tv   Headliners Replay  GB News  February 23, 2023 1:00am-2:01am GMT

1:00 am
the following the attack. shot the from behind , hitting him four from behind, hitting him four times while other news tonight the prime minister has said he'll deliver certainty , he'll deliver certainty, stability and clarity as . he stability and clarity as. he seeks a deal on post brexit arrangements in northern ireland. rishi sunak held talks . the northern irish business leaders today amid pressure to achieve a workable solution to the stalled protocol . and the stalled protocol. and earlier he told the house of commons intensive talks with the eu are ongoing . commons intensive talks with the eu are ongoing. in a gb news exclusive , the home secretary exclusive, the home secretary suella braverman said mr. sunak is completely committed to resolving the issue . i actually resolving the issue. i actually think you look historically at how our deals and agreements have been reached with the eu. it's important that we take a robust approach . we need to my robust approach. we need to my clear preference is for us reach a workable and dogmatic agreement with the eu . i know agreement with the eu. i know that the prime minister shares objective and i know that he's working flat to reach such an
1:01 am
agreement whilst not compromising on our sovereignty . well the prime minister has spoken to ukraine as president this evening with downing saying now is the time for ukraine to make real progress on the battlefield. that comes as the defence secretary said challenger 2 battles tanks could arrive in ukraine by spring. ben wallace was visiting army base in dorset today . ukrainian in dorset today. ukrainian troops were being trained on british tanks. he says britain could send additional tanks on top of the 14 already promised . top of the 14 already promised. but that depends on the threat level and the country's defence needs that to see this through . needs that to see this through. extraordinary. work calls their spirit is inspiring to instruct as you speak to and you know i think they are going to take the they've learned here and apply them in battle and not only keep themselves safe but make sure that they push back russia is illegal invasion . lancashire
1:02 am
illegal invasion. lancashire police says it welcomes the forthcoming independent review into its handling of the nicola bulley case. the college of policing will focus on the investigation and the search as well as the release of personal information about her, as well as the force's engagement with pubuc as the force's engagement with public and separately the police regulator will investigate a check carried out on ms. bulli just weeks before she went missing a body was recovered from the river wye on sunday. more than three weeks after she disappeared . now tesco is the disappeared. now tesco is the latest sigma to introduce a limit on how much fresh produce customers can buy as fruit and vegetable shortages are leaving some shelves bare . the retailing vegetable shortages are leaving giant joins aldi, asda and morrisons in temporarily rationing shopping with purchases of tomatoes , peppers, purchases of tomatoes, peppers, cucumbers and raspberries limited to three per customer as a precaution . bad weather and a precaution. bad weather and transport across europe and
1:03 am
nonh transport across europe and north africa are being blamed for disrupt into the supply lines with retailers warning the problems could last for weeks . problems could last for weeks. you're up to date on online and dab plus radio this is gb news. time now for headlines. hello i'm andrew doyle and welcome to headliners . your welcome to headliners. your first look at thursday's newspapers. joining me tonight are two of the most celebrated and adored comedians on the circuit. and no no, sorry, actually, that's next week. tonight got lewis schaefer and cox. how are both.7 right. lewis, are you in a good mood tonight? answer it. i'm not. it'sjust a it's just a pleasantry. you you know, you don't have to go into every detail. i hope you are in a good mood because when you're grumpy or difficult. oh, yes, i mean. i'm good, thanks. yeah. see how you answer the question?
1:04 am
how you? but know what? i how are you? but know what? i listen to you say because listen to what you say because i respect and i to. respect andrew and i want to. i take what you say seriously. and when i nervously when you say that i nervously suspect anyway, we're suspect sarcasm. anyway, we're going a look before going to have a look before begin front the begin at thursday's front the daily mail is running with amnesty row over fast track for asylum seekers. the guardian is running with alarm over rising tide of toxic forever . we're tide of toxic forever. we're going to be talking about that in a moment. the telegraph has warning to of economic cliff edge. warning to of economic cliff edge . the times has nature wants edge. the times has nature wants to double medical school places . seems like a sensible idea to me and the metro sees her solid as the great fruit and veg shortage. the daily star is going a similar theme there. what do we want? veg when do we want it? now and that is where your front pages . so we're going your front pages. so we're going to kick off with thursday telegraph lewis are the telegraph lewis are the telegraph for giving us. well the telegraph are typically on
1:05 am
the telegraph are typically on the side of big business and aren't the watchmen call it guy the head the chancellor of the exchequer that's just the man of day on it and he was going to he was he going for first. from what's his what's his name. well, they've been about five years. so mean. i don't i don't blame me for not remembering them. and so he's doing a vulture farce , which i've never vulture farce, which i've never used that before. we're used that term before. we're about yes. which he's about face. yes. which is he's actually increase the corporation tax , which is what corporation tax, which is what labour would do. yeah. which we do wish , which everybody is do wish, which everybody is saying is going to reduce the economy. yeah. so this is the thing paul a lot of backbenchers are very angry about this and they don't think this is going to work and this entire tactic is the idea. they're that is the idea. they're saying that this is you. they think they're going to get a result in the ballot box if they penalise the private that private sector. i mean, that fair that's probably fair as a as a judgement this point in time. however longer term, in
1:06 am
order for the in order for the economy to flourish, we're going to going to rely on big business. we're going to rely on investment tax is going to come down. i don't know where it's going to come down because we're digging a big digging ourselves out of a big hole. very difficult. hole. so it's very difficult. but order encourage but in order to encourage which is businesses big in is what businesses big in particular, we're always going to say we need to be to to say we need to be able to reduce and encourage reduce tax and encourage investment. begs investment. so this begs question right? and question was was liz right? and i mean, lots of people are now suggesting it's certainly looking back and reconsidering truss nomics . looking back and reconsidering truss nomics. i mean i don't what you think they'll lose but for me i think the time i even thought there was definitely lot of good there was there were some baby thrown out with that bathwater some of that was crazy the went about so the way we went about it so quickly however change was needed was what do you needed and, it was what do you think? there this think? do you think there this trust a point? think had trust at a point? i think had a point. was the wrong time in point. it was the wrong time in the wrong place to be doing it. i think i think this is insane because. people, the because. these people, the tories are not to no matter tories are not to win no matter what they do. right. no
1:07 am
what they do. right. there's no point that's a good point in undoing. that's a good point, it? if they are point, isn't it? if they are trying appeal the voters trying to appeal to the voters at late stage. yeah. at this late stage. yeah. i wanted to that a couple of wanted to do that a couple of years back. i mean, you're absolutely right. they haven't got hell, right? so got a hope in hell, right? so they give message, just they will give up message, just walk and say keir walk out now and say keir starmer, are to starmer, here are the keys to number 10. can mess it up number 10. you can mess it up for a while and then we can come back and we'll look. by contrast, yeah, probably contrast, yeah, that's probably the in 20 years the better, right? in 20 years they'll yeah about they'll be back. yeah by about 20 that seems about 20 years. that seems about right. going to the right. we're going to turn the front the daily. now, front cover of the daily. now, paul front cover of the daily. now, paul, are the daily running paul, what are the daily running with on thursday amongst? tea amnesty fast track for amnesty rallies a fast track for asylum we've a huge asylum seekers. now we've a huge 90,000 asylum seekers 90,000 backlog of asylum seekers largely by our largely brought on by our problems channel and problems in the channel and we've inducing we've and it's inducing other problems here you problems when they get here you know to store them the know having to store them the one of the better was they got to stay somewhere nice and safe and healthily and that's becoming because becoming a problem because there's so of them and what this is do is push as many is aiming to do is push as many through as quickly as possible, which means less which inevitably means less checks. difficult checks. so it's difficult because we saw public because we saw the public disturbance because we saw the public disturbarwe saw that, you know, recently. we saw that, you know,
1:08 am
and some and obviously there were some there very there were some very questionable from some questionable behaviour from some of who of the individuals who were staying we've also seen staying there. we've also seen lots of hotels being sort commandeered into it's kind of house people. so there is an issue , but is this kind of issue, but is this kind of backlog clearing exercise really the solution? lewis i mean, why don't they just get people's hackles up? well, it's gotten my hackles up? well, it's gotten my hackles up. and i really i'm not even from this country. i think it's the whole immigration thing is insult to everybody who is an insult to everybody who came in legally . you know, all came in legally. you know, all those millions of people who've signed the forms and filled out the forms brought over by their families. there's a lot of forms to fill out. a lot of forms to fill in. and it was people were sitting there waiting. they went they go down to croydon. they had to go down to croydon. oh blimey. well if way oh blimey. they well if way that's that's where that's where that that's where the office yeah. i mean the home office is. yeah. i mean how it, how have how could it, how can you have respect for home office when respect for the home office when it's home. so you, what it's at home. so you, what you're is, you know you're suggesting is, you know the are coming over the people who are coming over illegally who've been trafficked here obviously that's here and obviously that's benefiting gangster
1:09 am
benefiting lot of awful gangster type yeah they shouldn't type people. yeah they shouldn't be way. well be treated the same way. well you're it's interesting you mention that's the mention that because that's the least part trafficking least important part trafficking it they over it doesn't it's they came over in their own free no one forced them to go into those boats to go some of them go there a lot. some of them i know i should care about the people. some people do have incredible and they're incredible problems and they're coming and coming from torn areas and they're from different they're coming from different deprivation. and some of them are. that's not the are. but we know that's not the case in this case. those people coming from albania, god bless them. a war torn them. it's not a war torn country, but yeah, it's country, poor, but yeah, it's not a war. yes, you're probably right when it comes to albanians, mostly economic migrants. but paul, so what do you of that? i mean, what you make of that? i mean, what do do we do? because the do what do we do? because the numbers escalating at such a numbers are escalating at such a rate. obviously popular rate. it's obviously not popular with and you know, if with the public and you know, if the tories don't do about it, labour are to have to do labour are going to have to do something does seem an something it but it does seem an impossible situation but i imagine of imagine doing this sort of backlog is going backlog clearing is just going to make people more resentful because it now means that effectively of these effectively a lot of these people don't to have people don't even to have meetings, fill out meetings, they just fill out a form it's sorted and you form and it's sorted and you know, we don't know much about
1:10 am
them. first for me, them. but first of all, for me, any cynical for me say so, any cynical for me to say so, but i it is cynical. this but i think it is cynical. this is just dispersing the problem but i think it is cynical. this is _it's dispersing the problem but i think it is cynical. this is _it's disthesing the problem but i think it is cynical. this is _it's disthe moment3roblem but i think it is cynical. this is _it's disthe moment the lem but i think it is cynical. this is _it's disthe moment the house so it's at the moment the house in these that you see and in these hotels that you see and specifically liverpool, they're all one place. and if you all in one place. and now if you get out of that place get them out of that place quickly society, less of quickly and out society, less of a authorities in one a for the authorities in one place so they have dispersed around the bolted this is a huge for essentially people are for essentially these people are the are the metaphorical horse they are well of stable only well out of the stable the only way stop this is stop way we can stop this is to stop them getting here. now there's two ways to do this. stop two ways to do this. you stop them entirely. create safe them entirely. we create safe passage. i don't we've passage. i don't know if we've got for safe passage. it's got room for safe passage. it's really, difficult, really, really difficult, isn't it? know, there will it? because you know, there will be, pointed out, a be, as luis has pointed out, a lot illegal migrants who lot of illegal migrants who shouldn't be here. we shouldn't taking don't taking them on, but we don't want get rid of our great want to get rid of our great tradition of bringing in people who really i that, who really help. i think that, sure, we be proud of, but sure, we should be proud of, but those people getting lost. those people are getting lost. the i think. the shuffle here, i think. absolutely. that what absolutely. i that i think what it it's very proud, i'm it is it's the very proud, i'm afraid use this word. but afraid to use this word. but they're taking can i use they're taking the can i use that ? know word you that word? i know what word you mean. let's just leave it
1:11 am
mean. so let's just leave it that they're pulling mickey. they're taking the mickey. oh well, i think they well, yeah, because i think they would they're would say in america they're taking that taking taking the it's not that taking the bless them course the mickey god bless them course they want to come they're told they want to come they're told they can they'll they can come and they'll they'll come . and they'll be allowed to come. and this is a very good country, not the greatest but it is the greatest country, but it is a country. it's the a very country. it's the greatest country in this country is united oh, it is. is the united states. oh, it is. anyway, move to. on the anyway, let's move to. on the times, luis, you've got the times. have any what are they leading actually, leading with. actually, britain is greatest in the is the greatest country in the world it create america. world because it create america. there go. i don't want there we go. okay. i don't want to think like i'm. no, it's all right. they'll forgive you. i say, this is time. say, well, this is the time. this times and the wants this is the times and the wants more money to double medical school places. i didn't realise the nhs actually had had has paid medical schools and won't be half the problem i think. do they. the people are, i mean junior doctors are trained on the job in the nhs and. yeah. you know, i mean presumably course the what the nhs does need money. doesn't need more money. i mean doesn't it know. of course it doesn't need. why i mean, i mean, i mean
1:12 am
even i've used it even though i've used it actually today it doesn't need more most of the more money because most of the people sick, the people that people are sick, the people that they're you know there are they're you know out there are sick and they just got if they got it probably cut got 10% better it probably cut the but but don't you the budget but but don't you think the medical schools you know producing enough know we're producing enough staff country. we are staff in this country. we are having abroad to having to actually go abroad to get . yeah. and that's the way it get. yeah. and that's the way it should old fashioned way should be. the old fashioned way of stealing best and the of us stealing best and the brightest from poor and leaving those people . so a ago, those people. so a moment ago, you were concerned about you were very concerned about migration? it's no is migration? no, it's no one is the best in the world. the best doctors in the world. you're happy. see them. the best doctors in the world. you'want happy. see them. the best doctors in the world. you'want to happy. see them. the best doctors in the world. you'want to ha|something?m. you want to do something? i think. i think they're very good people . i'm saying nice things people. i'm saying nice things about country. i shouldn't about this country. i shouldn't say it's very of say they. no, it's very out of character. mean, you character. yeah i mean, you know, is, surely know, it is, it is surely firstly the nhs probably does need a lot more money and a lot more but also more resources, but they also need bodies, they need people to stuff it. it's a theme running through all our through out all of our industries at the moment if it's energy, , nhs, energy, food, n hs, self—sufficiency energy, food, nhs, self—sufficiency , a huge problem self—sufficiency, a huge problem for the uk . yes, we are unable
1:13 am
for the uk. yes, we are unable to generate enough food, enough fuel, to generate enough food, enough fuel , enough to generate enough food, enough fuel, enough nhs staff to be sufficient so i think what this story is trying to say, we need to invest in our , in our, in our to invest in our, in our, in our schooling for nurses and doctors. but that's, that's going to take 20 years to solve the problem so they've got to come up with something in the short term. yeah, sure. but at least they are thinking it's absolutely it's a good absolutely i think it's a good idea. probably idea. i mean, you're probably right, if they got 10% right, people, if they got 10% better, could save a lot of better, we could save a lot of money. i'm not sure that's going to on to to happen. well, moving on to the front cover of the guardian, they've got picture bowie they've got a picture bowie here. apparently lot of his here. apparently a lot of his archive been to the archive has been donated to the victoria museum. and victoria and albert museum. and the chosen the the image they've chosen is the one smith ripped off, one that sam smith ripped off, right? absolutely. and right? yeah, absolutely. and that's exactly what chosen is. that's know, that's just to say, you know, it's it isn't it's been done before. it isn't an outrageous it's just the time it was this law was done it was done. this law was done by icon. what's that main by an icon. and what's that main story so quite story on? so this is quite actually come across every actually they come across every now these stories but now and again these stories but alarm over rising tide of toxic forever chemicals can you define forever chemicals can you define forever i've this forever chemicals. i've had this many quite know
1:14 am
many times i don't quite know what is. it's something what it is. so it's something that by the body that is absorbed by the body whatever be, but never whatever it might be, but never leaves so all get leaves the body. so all get flushed out. it just stays there. with forever. there. it's with you forever. like these are these healthy chemicals or not. generally they're not healthy. chemicals are some and some sort of neutral and they don't do anything. but in this particular case, these pieces is particularly good and they're finding their way into us via animals . so this study is animals. so this study is talking about wildlife specifically that it's among the animal population . and this is animal population. and this is really bad news. i mean, you're very interested in health issues relating to health. i am . when relating to health. i am. when i read something like this, i think if they're focusing probably on the wrong thing, i'm not that great about this had to look what what that pfc look up what what that pfc i guess what they were fluoro alk so clearly you're not as your expertise isn't as good is but my general feeling is that these things might kill you they kill you but they can't kill you as
1:15 am
much as what you actually putting your mouse. we in we put in incredible amounts of toxicity in our mouth through through our diet . okay well on through our diet. okay well on that rather bleak . yeah that is that rather bleak. yeah that is the front page done. but to join us after the break, we'll be discussing why women don't want get married anymore. the problem with right wing women , why we with right wing women, why we won't be seeing a trainspotting three. see you in a minute .
1:16 am
1:17 am
1:18 am
welcome back to headline is with me andrew doyle. this will be your first look at thursday's newspapers. and joining me tonight, i've got louis schaefer and paul cox. we're to and paul cox. we're going to kick off section with daily kick off this section with daily mail. lewis is a moment big pr backfiring . oh, no , no . i mean, backfiring. oh, no, no. i mean, he's i've got to tell you what.
1:19 am
the inside. yes. okay. this is . the inside. yes. okay. this is. yes, yes. they sorry. what's happening , lewis, in this story. happening, lewis, in this story. what's happening in the story is that she's been all over the place making a public amazing pubuchy place making a public amazing publicity tour. yes. she's on the bbc. she's been in an even on tv channel, gb on that crazy tv channel, gb news. she has she has been she's been everywhere and she's asking for people to say she's i don't know if she says she's sorry, but she wants to be let but saying she wants to be let back. said no and back. and they've said no and they've and know they've said no and you know what? i understand why they what? i can understand why they say, know, in america, even say, you know, in america, even in america, they in the united of america, they strip their citizenship. strip people their citizenship. right. but the issue is right. but the issue here is that she 15, of course, when that she was 15, of course, when she syria to join isis. she went to syria to join isis. and people will say, well, that means that she was trafficked. her face is that she was a victim of trafficking , victim of child trafficking, saying awkwardness saying there's an awkwardness here with that, paul, because the age of criminal responsibility is ten. and do responsibility is ten. and so do you this? well i was you stand on this? well i was quite tell you, i was quite i tell you, i was surprised, actually, because i thought to do something like will in her favour, that wouldn't have been end of wouldn't have been the end of it, had they brought it, by the way, had they brought in still having
1:20 am
in a today that are still having quite space to go. i often quite some space to go. i often try to think what was i like at 15. myself in her position, 15. put myself in her position, you chose oasis over you know, i chose oasis over blur i 15. i blur when i was 15. yes. i didn't. she chose terrorism and i that's a big deal. you i think that's a big deal. you know, we've seen just on this channel just before our show tonight, daughter tonight, you know, the daughter of who beheaded by isis. of someone who beheaded by isis. yes there was a very serious nature this. and we can't set a precedent guess, because if you do that gates open and there are hundreds of people said so it's typical isn't it? because we all know what it's like to be 15 years old. you're without moral agency. know to join agency. you do know not to join agency. you do know not to join a that beheads people a death cult that beheads people and all of terror. and causes all sorts of terror. so don't think she can be so i don't think she can be absolved in that regard. the argument is that she was radicalised. i but i it's tricky. the other the other issue, of course, is surely she issue, of course, is surely she is our responsibility mean she's from she's british. so you from here, she's british. so you know the idea that we can't she doesn't have a british citizenship not citizenship anymore she's. not our just our problem. aren't we just washing our problems? washing our hands, our problems? well, was thinking of that. well, i was thinking of that. i was thinking she should be was thinking know she should be brought into country
1:21 am
brought back into the country and she be put on trial and she should be put on trial if bad, like what if it is bad, right? like what you're if it is bad you're saying? if it is bad enough her be kicked out enough for her to be kicked out of country, then it's good of the country, then it's good enough for her to be brought back put in jail for quite back and put in jail for quite a. interesting that a. it's interesting that her defence, seem surprised defence, they seem surprised by this yeah, idea. this decision. yeah, good idea. you and i suppose of you know and i suppose one of the things interesting the things that's interesting about this article i, it points out part of the judgement out that part of the judgement is, lot of the, the is, you know, a lot of the, the people involved been quite people involved have been quite shocked media shocked at her media appearances. they say it's very i think it's served as i don't think it's served as well as it. no, it hasn't done and you've never really and because you've never really is the real her you see different versions of her all along you know she looked dare say it very ethnic as if she part of that community and not she now looks very british and not only she's not really feeling so sorry for herself anymore, she's saying to other people, i am a victim here. and i think there is some truth in that. she's had a makeover, hasn't she? certainly i mean, she looks like a teenager now from. as she from. well, she's not as she was. old, is she? 73 is was. how old, is she? a 73 is over 23. i mean she looks like
1:22 am
back she was wearing the full veil and she was she she didn't seem strong to the bomber in manchester. it manchester. she thought know it was very to talk about to was very odd to talk about to decapitated i mean decapitated heads in a i mean also anyway getting old wrong anyway on anyway we're going to move on now to thursday's times women don't keep their don't want to keep their partners on a ball and chain anymore paul is this so the anymore paul what is this so the saying that more than half of all adults now unmarried , all adults are now unmarried, which mathematically means that we have a half must be as women , though particularly this story particularly focus on and say more than half of women aged 34 or under are now unmarried, showing they are increase , showing they are increase, putting off, getting wed until later in life. so why is that? i mean is that partly are they freezing their eggs that what people are doing. i don't think is any vow of celibacy or you anything of that nature. i think people still having people are still having relationships. are relationships. what people are doing? don't it's doing? no, i don't think it's a necessity as anything. and necessity as as anything. and societal but our necessity societal. but our necessity economic necessity . they are economic necessity. they are putting their careers before
1:23 am
their relationships. you see, limits . you know, when you were limits. you know, when you were in your twenties, that's was the age to get married, wasn't it? you know, it was even earlier than that. my mother was married when was 18 years right when she was 18 years old. right and this is as i've this and i think this is as i've this is about death of love, is is about the death of love, is that the all of society is working make it impossible working to make it impossible for to be together. and for people to be together. and he's careerism is he's got because careerism is that are focusing that because people are focusing on that. i at end of that because people are focusing on 1that's at end of that because people are focusing on 1that's you at end of that because people are focusing on 1that's you can end of that because people are focusing on 1that's you can callend of that because people are focusing on 1that's you can call it|d of that because people are focusing on 1that's you can call it that the that's you can call it that i call economic efficiency right a global capitalism they want people to work they want women to work for it helps economy it doubles it. you know doubles ikea spends and people need two cars two houses so they want women to work. and then by the time women wake up, they but here's the question. do you think they are happier than they were? you an 18 year old were? you know, an 18 year old trapped a loveless marriage? trapped in a loveless marriage? i'm making assumptions about your you know. your parents, but you know. yeah, yeah. it doesn't sound good. they were not happy, good. well, they were not happy, but back in the but people stayed back in the day. was married. i've day. no one was married. i've never woman. it never seen a happy woman. it could just. ithink never seen a happy woman. it could just. i think it's you. could be just. i think it's you. it could just be because of me.
1:24 am
but think, generally speaking, they equally happy. they are probably equally happy. i've my tune about this i've changed my tune about this . was like it was . i thought it was like it was a horrible situation yes that women aren't getting married , women aren't getting married, but circumstance. but people adjust circumstance. yeah, maybe they don't . they yeah, maybe they don't. they don't have children. they don't get . they groups of get married. they have groups of friends . they travel more. they friends. they travel more. they make they that video that make they that video of that woman that chelsea handler. handler, i saw you talking about. i see that you've seen it. do you think the happier i think we'll get to know really i mean, this makes a comparison. give us some context . 54.2% in give us some context. 54.2% in 2021 versus 18.3% in 1991 as essentially a generation . and essentially a generation. and what we're going to find is our generation, me and andrew. yeah what we're going to find at some point, we're going to identify whether this is causing a problem. there could be lots of women in particular without children. and that's that's a matter of nature, isn't it, for a lot of women. interesting. at the end of the day, not about women's happiness or men's happiness. it's about the society we need people.
1:25 am
otherwise go fall otherwise we're going to go fall off cliff like like south off a cliff like like south korea no is having kids or korea where no is having kids or china now, which has a huge problem so we'll wake up one day there won't be children who are going to pay. i'll be dead by then but won't pay your social. what if it's cold in this country? your there country? your pension there won't we do have a won't be. yeah, we do have a birth crisis apparently birth in crisis apparently anyway move thursday's anyway move on now to thursday's anyway move on now to thursday's a about an italian saying a story about an italian saying something that is not new something sexist that is not new news . well i don't know if it news. well i don't know if it was quite he just said it pretty sexist to make to say i didn't i read this i'm say where's the sexism in this. well he said the right wing women are now less attractive than they used to be. well, that's preference. yeah but yes, i mean, he's not allowed to say that i liked women back or women this. i mean, it's an old for a politician to say, are you allowed to say if you buy a car? i like the way cars look back in the 1970s. but women aren't property and a car is property. a car, as it were. it can taken from you in a bankruptcy. anyway, point point
1:26 am
anyway, the point is the point is, that that he said a is, is that that he said a couple of things that didn't like because you're not allowed to the truth is right wing women generally are more beautiful than the left wing is what you think. yes, that's the opposite . let me ask because the reason why and the reason why they are more attractive is because they're all mad and they're trying to make some man happy. so i think what this shows is the subjective of desire because, know, you've said because, you know, you've said one thing. this politician in italy said very italy said something very different. this a you different. and this is a who you know, exactly what he know, i say exactly what he says. said, well, this guy's says. he said, well, this guy's russa generally speaking, russa is generally speaking, historic. actually, the right wing they put wing women they put they put a little lippy ottoman makeup on. yeah. your louis. yeah. that's your taste, louis. i yeahi yeah. that's your taste, louis. i yeah i paul. i mean, i mean is yeah i paul. i mean, what's, what's interesting about this this guy i this stuff is that this guy is i mean, he's also said some the mean, he's also said some of the that said he was he that he said that he was he would be dismayed if one of his sons was gay. he's is someone who loves. benito mussolini. yes. first person wrote yes. first person i wrote actually, like actually, it sounds like something. schaefer would something. louis schaefer would say. he much did . say. yes. and he very much did. so had this conversation so we've had this conversation for then you can go
1:27 am
for a second and then you can go on. i want my son to be gay because it will be a victory for me, his mother. okay but that's a very different story about this he's actually, the this he's actually, for the first time, something that is right know, we often right wing. you know, we often use rightwing as as a term to describe anyone who says anything anymore but this is a right wing view. it is a right wing view. it's right now that everything empty, gay is kind everything is empty, gay is kind of anti—women. yeah so his middle benito. yeah, middle name is benito. yeah, i mean, come on. it's not mean, i mean, come on. it's not like a guy flags going up all over place, you know ? he over the place, you know? he made run on time. did made the trains run on time. did he i know, but the build, he not, i know, but the build, the highways, what did what? a benito mussolini. he did make the run but he the trains run on time, but he also did pretty bad things that kind of back going. we kind of back trains going. we were about that. exactly were worried about that. exactly so to move so anyway, we're going to move on this one. some good on now to this one. some good scottish news from the guardian is okay, we'll is it? wow. well, okay, we'll get the story is, get to that. but the story is, the epidemic of drug the growing epidemic of drug related in scotland may finally have peaked. thanks good and bad. is because data bad. well, it is because data suggesting that now at the suggesting that we're now at the point it's starting to
1:28 am
point where it's starting to shnnk point where it's starting to shrink and the more i read about the story more think the the story the more i think the reason shrinking is most of reason it's shrinking is most of the people have died drug deaths sort look the snp has sort of look the snp has presided over a terrible regime of drug deaths and the highest incidence of drug deaths in europe. i think something like that i would say that's one to some one of the snp was going to say both sturgeon and salmon. one of the biggest issues is this . the one of the biggest issues is this. the biggest failings is this. the biggest failings is this this in education in scotland , terrible. and they scotland, terrible. and they haven't solved it. whoever comes in next, whether we'll be snp , in next, whether we'll be snp, we'll have to solve it. but drug related. you have to look at this a societal issue. yeah, of course you know these people are addicted to drugs for a reason. they're addicted to the alcohol addicted to drugs for a reason. the reason dicted to the alcohol addicted to drugs for a reason. the reason their! to the alcohol addicted to drugs for a reason. the reason their life the alcohol addicted to drugs for a reason. the reason their life isn't|lcohol addicted to drugs for a reason. thereason their life isn't goodl , a reason their life isn't good as it could be or should be in scotland. there is you've scotland. now there is you've got many many got them many times, many outside criminals many times , outside criminals many times, yeah. i've spent a year of my life . scotland. yeah. the thing life. scotland. yeah. the thing that i found very interesting that i found very interesting that that the people who are dying of drug misuse is the
1:29 am
average age was 44. so it's surprising actually, isn't it? increased so it's not something young kids you know it's older people who've the will to live now that was 44 was the average death of the middle ages. i mean that's why this is going back to isn't right i mean how do you wake up one day and suddenly realise it's cold and rainy up here. okay so that's not that. take note . that is all for this take note. that is all for this section. but after the break we've got good and the bad we've got the good and the bad of a i why parents drama could be and has lego gone woke be banned and has lego gone woke santa moment .
1:30 am
1:31 am
1:32 am
welcome back . headline is with welcome back. headline is with me andrew doyle. this is your first look at thursday's newspapers? and we're going to kick off this section with the guardian poll. we can't go another day without another air
1:33 am
chat bot being i taking over. and the concern think and this the concern i think here not in some terrifying way in a technological way and an industrial way the uk needs to support the creation of a british version of chat jpt, which thinking well, this is a good point. i was trying to find why i think it's just because we british and we feel like we need to skin in the game we need be part of this stuff is being developed in the states and around the world already jealousies of the other countries have it. we've got to have as well. we don't need have it as well. we don't need to. we have our own microsoft. we don't our google. i'm we don't have our google. i'm not sure we need this. not sure why we need this. i think one of reasons people think one of the reasons people believe need it is because believe we need it is because the guy who adrian , which is the guy who is adrian, which is the guy who is adrian, which is the data artificial the chief data artificial intelligence officer, bt. he thinks there's a that in the uk we lose out to large tech companies in, areas like cyber security and health and things that. so it's about being self sufficient again there is i don't trust or this gtp stuff i don't trust or this gtp stuff i don't like it at all. i don't like the fact that the questions
1:34 am
ask it come back in a really partisan way. so it's sort of moulding a sort of the scope of , acceptable thought. am i just being luddite ? no. you're being a luddite? no. you're being a luddite? no. you're being totally correct. being totally, totally correct. and that's why this thing is completely complete ridiculousness, america ridiculousness, because america is getting the head start in controlling our lives through to people using this chat thing. yeah. as as all, as we've all seen it. and who who is supporting this whole business about britain having their own sovereign and why do we need exactly why do we just have to leap? i mean, the accent is kind of a british accent. i don't even know how this stuff works. and it feels to me this is a bit with spin on it. i'm not i'm not entirely sure this is us saying we must have a brit. i think what we're saying is we need to be in the game with the takeover it's actually it's the chief data and artificial intelligence officer peter beattie , the one officer peter beattie, the one he's saying he's been advising jeremy hunt recently in terms of
1:35 am
investment. and so his name keeps popping up in stories the last few days and i'm putting and two together, i think he's becoming a bit of an adviser. yeah, i think it's a bit scary. this to on to the daily this is to move on to the daily mail. i'm going to stick with the story. let me. so this one about household chores, this is actually story actually my fear. this story is what terrifies could it what terrifies me. how could it terrify? it's the daily mail it says say hello to i read a signing but are and it's a that is the worst pun i've ever seen i don't know i've heard it. i've seen it. it doesn't make any sense. what but basically basically they're saying air is going to help people at home. it's like there's all the major developments have helped people over the past 100 years. okay. the vacuum cleaner, do you remember? there is there was a film in, the eighties called runaway with the guy who played magnum what? selleck. magnum pi. what? tom selleck. and was by michael and it was written by michael crichton. all these crichton. it had all these robots all household robots doing all the household chores. but was a police chores. right. but was a police officer in a cyber set up to deal with the robots that go mad
1:36 am
and start attacking human beings right . that's my fear. you get right. that's my fear. you get these.i right. that's my fear. you get these. i mean these articles talk about child care you're talking about not doing the talking about not just doing the ironing i get like the ironing and doing i get like the shopping maybe if you shopping you know maybe if you have month have the same thing every month from yeah or little in from waitrose yeah or little in your case whatever it is then your case whatever it is then you know you a robot to that you know you a robot to do that because stuff gets but they do could but that's to could potentially but that's to kill robots so this article could have been written 30 5070 years ago saying robots will look after the baby but not going to trust a robot to look after. are they saying the saying that the robots are going to the estimating that the robots going to do 20% of childcare tasks 3033. that's yeah. childcare tasks 3033. that's yeah . would you trust a robot to yeah. would you trust a robot to look after your child. i wouldn't i don't think anyone of our generation would to be honest. i mean we've grown up on the movies that you're talking about eventually we all know having watched movies the having watched these movies the electronics and starts electronics goes bad and starts assess what's going assess exactly what's going happen and what are we happen and what what are we going all the spare going do with all the spare time, right everyone's working
1:37 am
at home. everyone's working at home at home anyway. they're already at home. less home. then we'll be doing less and less now. the only exercise i'll get. you'll very i'll get. you'll be very interested is gardening. interested in this is gardening. i enjoy at 43, very i genuinely enjoy at 43, i very much enjoy my and i don't want someone to tell somebody. oh well that's. i am i'm afraid. lewis. yes but body might not be if we can talk about that. another as with the another time. but as with the other gp, t is taking other story gp, t is taking a lot of pleasure. i've never used it, but i wonder if you could use it for up or write a column. you with whether it can write jokes and things like that. they might better than lewis's. might be better than lewis's. i what does that mean. well, i mean , i know the truth is the mean, i know the truth is the truth is it probably i've seen what it does it could write. i've written things my show i've written things for my show that, like show that, you know, like my show tomorrow the ivy tomorrow with the at the ivy house, right? seven, 730 tickets on eventbrite at lewis schaefer right. lewis we get the point and i just okay yeah look you're after the kids but it doesn't say how it's going to look after the kids. it's going to say it's
1:38 am
going to i'm going to i think do your own household chores. well only the only part is looking after already. yes. after children already. yes. there well, there is stuff. yeah. well, i don't i just think don't don't know, i just think don't don't know, i just think don't do this at all. you can you can handle it yourself. don't need robots. they're going to us robots. they're going to kill us all. my diagnosis. all. that's my diagnosis. anyway, to, anyway, moving on now to, thursday's metro and faith could be to lgb discussion be a barrier to lgb discussion in poll. this in the classroom poll. this strikes a bit obvious. yes strikes me as a bit obvious. yes doesi strikes me as a bit obvious. yes does i read the story or the headlines? at least the third. a third of teachers say faith is a barrier in discussing discussing lgbt issue. plus, a new study, a similar from among 7000 teachers young from a young people's charity called just like us found that faith schools particular. but 46% of other schools are finding it very difficult to combine having the faith discussion alongside . faith discussion alongside. lgbtq diversity. isn't this just simply the major abrahamic religions that homosexuality, or at least the act homosexuality is sinful? yeah and i think we
1:39 am
have seen this manifest itself with kate forbes just this week . of course, kate fall was refreshing . i know we've covered refreshing. i know we've covered this story lots of times, but kate forbes refreshingly is someone who is saying she has these beliefs and is being honest about them, but quite happy to exist a primarily in a world with other people. well, and done but the way we and this can done but the way we the way brought society together particularly in the last 20 years, we've become equally accepting but equally more at the same time. i don't know what people want because i mean, i saw kemi badenoch the equalities minister being interviewed today and she was said she and you know, she was said she was what will you condemn , kate was what will you condemn, kate forbes, view on forbes, his view on homosexuality and of course, part equality ministers part of the equality ministers brief stick up for brief is to stick up for religious minorities well, religious minorities. well, she can't around condemning . you can't go around condemning. you know, to protect know, she has to protect religious is religious freedom and of that is their right say homosexuality their right to say homosexuality is sinful. but we don't know. like in school what the people can say at a muslim . they might can say at a muslim. they might not be able to say, are you gay at a at a at a, you know, maybe
1:40 am
at a at a at a, you know, maybe a westernised school. they they might not be able to talk about the muslim faith. okay. okay. so there's the people are because of the way things are now with the silo mentality, you're in your silo there's lots of different religious as well. it's not an argument for not having faith and actually just, you know, that everybody believe the same thing. yes is because it makes it a lot easier what i meant to say. well it makes was suggesting more not the faith of living or whatever that i was suggesting more a kind of secular approach. no, it doesn't, because it it just means you're a muslim , that means if you're a muslim, that means if you're a muslim, that means that your religious can't be . they can be be expressed. they can be expressed in a secular society , expressed in a secular society, any religion protects , not in any religion it protects, not in the school, but it doesn't protect. it doesn't see much difference between we all learn. ari school. it was a small subject that was a week, really. it wasn't a school that went to stanford comprehensive . yeah. we stanford comprehensive. yeah. we should talk about the should be able to talk about the things. be able discuss things. should be able discuss these we're these things. yeah okay. we're going now to
1:41 am
going to move on now to thursday. and the only thing seems to be building is an inclusive city profile. i know this one of those ridiculous this is one of those ridiculous things ever seen in the things i've ever seen in the telegraph. it's lego releases telegraph. if it's lego releases new shirts, figurines new figure shirts, vr figurines with , down's syndrome with, down's syndrome and missing limbs. with, down's syndrome and missing limbs . and so they're missing limbs. and so they're trying to be inclusive. they're trying to be inclusive. they're trying to be inclusive. they're trying to be inclusive to children who with disabilities. the points aren't is the point is these figurines i seem to remember you were able to pull off an hour but so if someone it's if the mine had missing arms need shoot them off arms i need just shoot them off it . they emailed a lego unveiled it. they emailed a lego unveiled a new a new range of figures with physical and mental disabilities, including characters with anxiety and missing the becoming a lot more detailed. i if you look at that pic yeah that's not have lego used to look that is nothing like they are becoming more detailed and maybe when they become more detailed you get personality they're personality but they're not you know figurines, they're know the lego figurines, they're not then what not going to be that. then what they're about is they're they're talking about is they're talking about a tv show, the lego show. right. which is to
1:42 am
lego tv show. right. which is to not lego figurines. oh not as the lego figurines. oh well, what harmless. well, what is this harmless. really? ultimately, really? yes, i think ultimately, it's there's it's a good thing there's nothing wrong with that however lego represent lego is never really represent of wasn't of humans anyway. it wasn't a perfect representation as it was kind of yellow and, small and square yellow in squares. same for know. but he for everybody, you know. but he looks that so. when you looks like that so. so when you go to that, then just go back to that, then just because no one, no one feels underrepresented, all of underrepresented, they all of them and square. them are yellow and square. i think square or think they get one square or maybe just sell kits with maybe they just sell kits with fewer arms and legs. yeah, they've animated a way that's made it more human now. so i, because if you get a lego piece andifs because if you get a lego piece and it's got missing arms, you might take it back thinking you might take it back thinking you might another one. then you might want another one. then you might want another one. then you might accused ableism. might be accused of ableism. yeah, up to the yeah, it's an up to the minefield like minefield they don't like that at anyway, going to at all. anyway, we're going to move now to this article, which is in the telegraph poll now is the news period dramas the bad news for period dramas apparently course it apparently yeah and course it whereas netflix consider whereas netflix and bbc consider lewis that way so that could do with one another netflix , itv, with one another netflix, itv, bbc. you can sit in banning corsets , costume dramas, stars corsets, costume dramas, stars find it difficult eating and
1:43 am
there's bruising and, breathing problem. they're not good for you, are they? cause no. and you know what? they're also not for you. and it is of its time. so i first started reading this so could pull this off time. could pull this off it's time. so you to represent it. but so you need to represent it. but there were four people that had lumps and bumps and to straighten bumps straighten those lumps and bumps out looks like that out what actor looks like that all actors size zero all those actors a size zero anyway so like a version anyway so they do like a version of a corset that doesn't. well such a good point. what exactly? they corset that's they just make a corset that's not corset don't like. yeah not a corset don't like. yeah it just fits the body rather than squashing would squashing bulge that would be the i mean the solution but you know i mean i is a non—story as someone i this is a non—story as someone who works on many many films and keeps telling us about it. but you it's great that you're you know, it's great that you're a celebrity. i'm a a celebrity. yeah, i'm a celebrity are that is that i celebrity are is that is that i think this has a lot to do just with very with cost you it's very expensive to put something in a course that you a dresser there. yes to dress the person up these people he's costumers for the films they got the one of the worst jobs in the world they got to be there like fourth clock in
1:44 am
the morning. yeah so this is a probably just an economic have to wear a corset for film. i had two when was in cruella . yes. two when i was in cruella. yes. i had to wear something on my nose because my nose was broken and that was the closest come to something that's quite. didn't something that's quite. i didn't know in cruella. i look know you were in cruella. i look you for me in cruella you could look for me in cruella you could look for me in cruella you know when our mutual friend scott chaparro was in the first star phantom star wars film, the phantom menace, dresses and menace, he had two dresses and alien. a big, tight alien. they made a big, tight rubber that, be quite rubber suit that, could be quite uncomfortable and, you know, some i think wearing some sort of, i think wearing a rubber for scott was not an rubber suit for scott was not an come now i think you know it is that normally less so for sculpture so move that is sculpture so let's move that is actually section done actually this section and done with us for the last with and do join us for the last part the show we'll be part the show where we'll be discussing favourite discussing olivia's favourite topic. can guess topic. you probably can guess what might be, we shall what that might be, but we shall find you in a few find out. see you in a few minutes minutes.
1:45 am
1:46 am
1:47 am
welcome back to . the final part
1:48 am
welcome back to. the final part of headliners your first look at thursday's newspapers and we're going to kick off this section with thursday's mail. lewis this is tailor for you. yeah, well, it gets my all of europe as the daily mail says, junk food addiction is just as dangerous, hooked on alcohol or drugs . and hooked on alcohol or drugs. and i don't think i'm going to say something. i think it's the organised issues that are behind this thing because i know the person in this public health collaboration is the campaign. this is a campaign. basically what saying is what they're saying is that they're the food is they're saying is the food is addictive . and as soon as you addictive. and as soon as you say that you've left out 90% of the entire thing, food is not addictive. kinds of food are inherently and that food is sugan inherently and that food is sugar. yes. and if you eliminate sugan sugar. yes. and if you eliminate sugar, you're 90% of the fat is gone. so interesting, i mean, that they're now saying in this study, over two thirds of adults over 16 are obese , do we need over 16 are obese, do we need the numbers? everybody this? no, no. yeah yeah. okay. so, sugar , no. yeah yeah. okay. so, sugar, the problem there is sugar.
1:49 am
sugaris the problem there is sugar. sugar is a job, so you don't think that it helps sort of, say, junk food addiction is a real thing? does it kind of mean that if you eat a lot of junk food, you can be said it's not your fault because you're your victim of addiction. a it's victim of addiction. it's a it's a disease. they could because they what because they see so what it because basically a people are basically a saying people are manipulated. end manipulated. but at the end of the day these people are the day with these people are doing and you know chris whitty that that that bloated that that bloated that bloated horrible scientist i know horrible chief scientist i know you're okay. horrible chief scientist i know you�*not okay. horrible chief scientist i know you�*not calling okay. horrible chief scientist i know you�*not calling him okay. horrible chief scientist i know you�*not calling him a okay. horrible chief scientist i know you�*not calling him a liar okay. horrible chief scientist i know you�*not calling him a liar ,kay. horrible chief scientist i know you�*not calling him a liar , sir.. i'm not calling him a liar, sir. sorry quit waiting. i wouldn't i wouldn't trust with guy has to say if he told me that a pandemic was here and that it would help to wear masks and have a lot of news you i wouldn't that guy but what he's what they what they want to do is they want more nanny state to come in to regulate like what is what is junk. my junk food is different than your junk food. let people make decisions . i'm let people make decisions. i'm telling people out there , do telling the people out there, do not do not eat sugar. okay it's just a sugar issue. paul, is louis a right about that ? i'd be
1:50 am
louis a right about that? i'd be fearful to argue. yeah. yes however, i were going to fight sideways . i think it's a great sideways. i think it's a great piece i was going to use as the benchmark. it's quite simple . it benchmark. it's quite simple. it if you want to lose weight, stopping but you but if you are addicted what if you know what if it's like well i think this this this risen use with me for similar reasons resonates with louis but for very different reasons at the same time. you know arguably i've addicted to food and particularly junk food because it's convenient and easy and cheaper and cheaper does come into it . and cheaper and cheaper does come into it. certainly and cheaper and cheaper does come into it . certainly the come into it. certainly the convenience does. i think is right about sugar. if you if you cut out sugar , none of us would cut out sugar, none of us would be fat. i way too i mean, i'm worried that i've got so much preservative in me that my body would take about a century to decompose as well. okay, well, what a horrible image that. and when i sugar, i say when i say sugar, when i say suganl when i say sugar, when i say sugar, i do not mean just like white mean i mean true white sugar. i mean i mean true in fruit, fruity sugar fructose
1:51 am
as a sugar glucose as a sugar lactose, all kinds of sugar. and potatoes are sugar carbohydrates , which there is kinds of is high sugar is already on it, to be honest. but yesterday's metric can of drink be too sexual poll. well, i'm not sure it can be, but this is quite amusing side of my because furious after that drink banned because sexual the because it's too sexual the bearded brewery has left has been fuming after the uk's alcohol regulator banned its cherry flavoured unshaven maiden. and i think we've got to look an image of there it is, the unshaven maiden. and as you can see, the significant aspects of her breasts are covered by. the by the beard by that by the hair. yeah yeah. she's the unshaven. hair. yeah yeah. she's the unshaven . you know that, sir. unshaven. you know that, sir. and how is how is how does that have to do with underage sex? that's like grown woman. she's obviously had not under age came into it but it was in really sorry yeah the lady brewery says
1:52 am
that the pullman group the people have made this complaint they are implying our product and our brewery support , people and our brewery support, people looking with underage looking to sleep with underage girls got a beard, not girls. if she's got a beard, not thick, there's no way she's a no job. know she's very much job. you know she's very much post puberty the bathing mermaid is representative is not really representative visit. this seems like a visit. i mean this seems like a really silly i think sell really silly does i think sell your mermaid the bearded mermaid somebody something somebody was offended something someone and if you someone was upset and if you look at that picture do you think that sexual then this wrong? yeah think was he's wrong? yeah i think i was he's become she's got gills exactly become i she's got gills exactly . she could be i mean granted i find it attractive. oh yeah. but that's you, you know. but you know you know, amazing know what? you know, amazing about this is that alcohol is a fermented sugar i hate to tell you, this stuff , drinking, you, this stuff, drinking, drinking, alcohol drinking fruit juices , any anything that has juices, any anything that has any kind of , juices, any anything that has any kind of, anything that's white. it's not it's going to happen anyway. thurs independent now hinds is searching a man who survived on the average student diet. well, this is lost at sea. supposedly was he doing? not
1:53 am
anymore. he was found. he was found and he lived for he was he he survived for a month eating ketchup the cheese catch up for a month. just the point spices, i believe as well. somebody somebody everybody needs to know you've got enough food on you to last at least a month. i'm sitting here with like six months, maybe a one believable worth of stuff , shaming the worth of stuff, shaming the other panellist needs to be shaved. my mum's to come in through that door in a minute. i'm i have. i have a little bit of fat. i'm not going to talk to you because you're my employer. yeah this image now, this is about want it about they want find it basically. so want to find basically. so hinds want to find the interestingly, they the cane. interestingly, they want to find him to give him a really nice prize. so they want to a new state. the to give him a new state. the boat with the right on it boat with all the right on it because got lost. yes, he got because he got lost. yes, he got lost. didn't know to how lost. he didn't know to how navigate anymore. the weather took over and basically took over and he was basically lost and thought, lost for 24 days. and i thought, lewis, you know, don't lewis, you say, you know, don't eat and that kind of eat sugar and that kind of thing. if all you've got is a bottle of ketchup, then that's how this was dietary
1:54 am
how you survive this was dietary choice. i think if choice. oh, no, no. i think if you have is a bottle of ketchup. is that. no because it just it's going to going to cause going to it's going to cause diabetes i think that diabetes basically. i think that was least wherever we was the least of his wherever we 90, was the least of his wherever we go, just got time for this go, we've just got time for this one the front page of one from the front page of the metro is cucumbers such an metro is 100 cucumbers such an unreasonable well, it unreasonable request? well, it depends you're doing with unreasonable request? well, it dep hydration you're doing with unreasonable request? well, it dep hydration gavere doing with unreasonable request? well, it dep hydration gave them. g with unreasonable request? well, it dep hydration gave them. yeahh unreasonable request? well, it dep hydration gave them. yeah it the hydration gave them. yeah it is request is an unreasonable request because cucumber of the because the cucumber, one of the absolute. even a food absolute. it's not even a food because has so few calories . because it has so few calories. it probably as much time it probably takes as much time to tell us what this woman did. she she went into little and to buy cucumbers. she's always able to cucumbers, but for her to buy cucumbers, but for her business, which is making mrs. making juices. okay. well much to say about that. we're going to say about that. we're going to have to end there anyway. those are the stories for those are all the stories for today. have another quick today. let's have another quick reminder. front page today. let's have another quick re theier. front page today. let's have another quick re the daily front page today. let's have another quick re the daily mail front page today. let's have another quick re the daily mail with'ont page today. let's have another quick re the daily mail with amnesty is the daily mail with amnesty row fast track for asylum row over fast track for asylum seekers, the guardian alarm over rising tide of toxic forever chemicals . the telegraph has chemicals. the telegraph has warning to hunt of economic cliff edge . the times has nhs cliff edge. the times has nhs wants to medical school places and the star what do we want?
1:55 am
veg when do we want it? now thanks for joining veg when do we want it? now thanks forjoining us veg when do we want it? now thanks for joining us for tonight's show and thanks, of course, to libby schafer and paul cox, headline news back tomorrow at 11:00 with myself, nick dixon and leo kearse. and if you're watching the 5 am, repeat, stick it's time repeat, stick around. it's time for breakfast show .
1:56 am
1:57 am
1:58 am
warm welcome. it is may bev turner on the clock slot. all week. we've got a great show lined up for you tonight along with some great company. i've got my panel this evening. kelvin former editor kelvin mackenzie, former editor of political of the sun and political commentator arron bustani joining me discuss very joining me to discuss some very controversial topics this evening. tony, william evening. remember, tony, william hague, two of our former
1:59 am
politicians you just can't help themselves when it comes to weighing in on matters, despite being they've both being totally well, they've both just an overhaul in just called for an overhaul in our sector, rolling in our public sector, rolling in digital sinister. i reckon digital id sinister. i reckon so. it's been ruled also today that the revoking of shamima bingham's citizenship is lawful. some would and argue that her human rights take precedence over national security . i'm over national security. i'm going to be debating that with my panel so the already content smart motorways had a not too tech smarts of blunders. today the smart system crashed for 2 hours, which i believe leaving the majority of the uk's motorways in a signal blackout and motorists acting like dogs and motorists acting like dogs and smart motorway already caused 60 plus deaths whilst operating. how many more blackout ? so we see more blackout? so we see more casualties this poses. the question is tech really that smart? we're going to debate on that later on. and a transgender cartoonist who has a comma is admitted. it's not a secret. she's admitted to indulging in a half a nappy and that's right,
2:00 am
nappy. not happy half a nappy and that's right, nappy- not happy ”appy half a nappy and that's right, nappy. not happy nappy fetish art is going to be speaking at a family event in sheffield about her book on growing up. trans is going be digging into that. most importantly me your thoughts and questions gbp is at gbnews.uk all the headlines with polly middlehurst middlehurst. all the headlines with polly middlehurst middlehurst . bev middlehurst middlehurst. bev thank you. good evening . the top thank you. good evening. the top story. the defence secretary says to battle tanks could arrive ukraine by spring. ben wallace has visited army base in dorset where ukrainian soldiers are being trained on standard british tanks . the uk has british tanks. the uk has already promised to 14 to ukraine, but mr. wallace says britain could offer up additional tanks depending on the threat level and country's defence needs . that defence needs. that determination to see this through is extraordinary . their through is extraordinary. their work ethos, their spirit is inspiring to the instructors you speak to and i think they are
2:01 am
going to

32 Views

info Stream Only

Uploaded by TV Archive on