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tv   Headliners Replay  GB News  March 14, 2023 1:00am-2:01am GMT

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announce the next stage of the so—called orcas program . it was so—called orcas program. it was signed initially by three nafionsin signed initially by three nations in 2021 to boost defence's and counter china's threat in indo—pacific region . threat in indo—pacific region. and this news comes as number today announced defence spending will rise by almost £5 billion over two years. rishi sunak is called the trilateral orcas submarine , the most significant, submarine, the most significant, multi—layered defence partnership in the comes to this with over 60 years experience of running our own fleet will provide the world leading design and build the first of these new boats creating thousands of good jobs in places like barrow and derby and we will share our knowledge and experience with australian engineers so they can build their own fleet . now australian engineers so they can build their own fleet. now our partnership is significant because , not just are we because, not just are we building submarines together will also be truly interoperable
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. can on today we'll hear the government's migration bill has passed its second reading in the house commons tonight. there was a majority 62, despite a tory backbench rebellion. several tory mps had called for amendments to the bill, but mps voted 312 to 250 in favour. the legislation would allow for the removal of illegal channel migrants from the uk and the bill will now proceed to the committee stage as been hearing the television presenter gary lineker has been reinstated to match the day presenting after reaching an agreement with the bbc today . that's after he was bbc today. that's after he was taken off air over a tweet on the government's migration bill last week . the bbc director last week. the bbc director general apologised and said the corporation's launching an independent review of its social media guidelines . the board has media guidelines. the board has welcomed the move . impartiality welcomed the move. impartiality is a cornerstone tone of the bbc and speaking bbc
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director—general tim davie said he had taken proportionate action . dick fosbury, who action. dick fosbury, who revolutionised the high jump in athletics has died at the age of 76. his agents said he passed away peacefully in his sleep in the early hours of sunday morning following a battle with lymphoma mma. fosbury used his new technique to win gold at the 1968 olympic games in mexico city , a technique copied city, a technique copied thereafter by millions . king thereafter by millions. king charles and other members of the royal family have attended a service celebrating commonwealth day to day at westminster abbey and the king focussed . in his and the king focussed. in his speech on the theme of a sustainable and peaceful common future , king charles said a future, king charles said a commitment to peace, progress and opportunity would sustain
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the commonwealth. that's from the commonwealth. that's from the gb newsroom now time the headuneis. headline is. hello i'm andrew doyle welcome to headline your first look at tuesday's top news stories. joining me tonight are the cherubic jonathan cogan and the devilish bruce devlin. am i both pretty good? you seem a bit offended by that, bruce. i apologise. no, i'm more of offended that cherubic group. i didn't. i think you are. i'm turning cherubic in the downstairs. wow oh, wow. i don't think you want to admit that on tv? jonathan, we. you do have a very angelic face, though, don't you? thank you. i'm full of darkness and resentment inside. yes oh, yeah . that's why you're yes oh, yeah. that's why you're here. well, before crack on, we're going have a look at tuesday's front pages and we start with the daily mail, which
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is leading with a slap in the face for bbc licence payers. of course we're going to be covering in a moment. of course , about gary lineker. then the telegraph a for telegraph has a boost for pensions as hunt ready to raise cap on his head headwear. he's actually talking about a pensions cap. the guardian bbc bosses face pressure after u—turn . lineker that's u—turn. lineker that's dominating a number the front dominating a number of the front covers. has pm strikes covers. the times has pm strikes a submarine deal to face threat and the sun glitter back jail that's gary glitter there the daily star. great too. bbc pulls up one zero to the crisp salesman . very, not very nice of salesman. very, not very nice of them. those your front pages . so them. those your front pages. so let's have a look at these front page. it's going to start with the front of the times. jonathan, what are the times leading with tuesday? well, this is a rather exciting. slash terrifying story. the terrifying story. so the pm strikes submarine deal to face new threat so select warned of the now coming russia the dangers now coming russia
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and there's been quite and china. there's been quite a lot of tension globally and this to be way that he is to be the way that he is reacting to that so britain is preparing to double its fleet of attack submarines as rishi sunak warned of a difficult and dangerous decade . so the prime dangerous decade. so the prime minister deal last minister sealed a deal last night build a multi—billion night to build a multi—billion powerfully in britain using us thatis powerfully in britain using us that is also being shared with australia. so this seems to be a bit of team up with some of our allies. we're all getting four new subs. it's not necessarily going to be the easiest time for the citizen if you're of the citizen if you're part of the citizen if you're part of the military industrial catching. well yes, catching. okay. well yes, certainly. i mean, it's good for some people, people to be earning a lot of money always happens wartime situations. happens in wartime situations. absolutely. about absolutely. but is this about the tensions in terms the escalating tensions in terms of china? may be cosying up with russia. does seem russia. more and more does seem to be prospect. it does to to be prospect. it does seem to be. of don't want to be. it's kind of don't want to say all the bad guys, but, you know, from how they how they treat it does treat their citizens, it does seem a that way. seem to be a bit that way. there's a human rights there's bit of a human rights issue china. i think you're issue in china. i think you're to say that a lot of bad guys in that respect. yeah. so you
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concerned escalation concerned about this escalation does we are does make you feel that we are on cusp of a world war. no, on the cusp of a world war. no, no, no, not concerned. and no, i don't. on the cusp of don't. we are on the cusp of a world. and if we are, then i'm. i've obviously fudged . yeah, i've obviously fudged. yeah, yeah. well, this becomes so know i don't really i think there are escalating tensions i suppose on roughly everywhere there are. exactly. and this is just symptomatic of that i suppose. but on the other hand, as jonathan good for the jonathan says good for the economy good news specifically economy, good news specifically for places like barrow and darby. i think rishi had to say yes , that's where they're going yes, that's where they're going to them. yes they're going to build them. yes they're going to build them. yes they're going to them in and derby to build them in batu and derby so well done to the people in barrow when you barrow and derby but when you think submarines, you think of submarines, you think about clearly because about in derby clearly because they're be rolls—royce they're going to be rolls—royce sanctions, aren't they? is sanctions, aren't they? oh, is that might be that right? yeah. so it might be the that's what i the beatles. that's what i got you. yeah. oh interesting. okay, we're going to move the we're going to move on to the front cover next paper front cover of our next paper the telegraph. they're running with something different. with something a bit different. bruce, they're running bruce, i believe they're running with stuff what with a property of stuff what would you like focus on? would you like me to focus on? the really did stand the one that really did stand out me was. bottle of wine
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out to me was. a bottle of wine to cost $0.05 more in tax rate. the of a bottle of wine is expected to rise by about £45. thanks to an alcohol tax rate to be amongst budget. be amongst the budget. jeremy hunt, chancellor set to hunt, the chancellor set to confirm tomorrow that alcohol dufies confirm tomorrow that alcohol duties will rise with inflation. now in terms of these kinds of leaps , that's quite a jump, leaps, that's quite a jump, isn't it? 45 ppi? i think so. i mean, when you're buying a bottle of wine, what if i is neither here nor there? is it? you know, is £3, so 45? i mean, do they still make fun? i an order. yeah, i think i think jonathan, you're buying bad wine then you might notice the difference but if you're buying a decent shapely and actually possibly the low it's possibly the ultimate low it's neither handle that i think ultimately if you wine you will find a way to purchase wine. yes and so many leading supermarkets have offers mean you don't get them so much scotland because we have pricing on alcohol. have minimum pricing on alcohol. yes mean which not sure if yes i mean which i'm not sure if it's worked or not but down here you do get a of buy six you do get a lot of buy six bottles and get 25% off. yes the
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thing with the minimum pricing on alcohol is has on alcohol in is it has disproportionately affected poorer because it's just poorer people because it's just affected the cheaper drinks you . know if you're rich and you're buying whatever you want. it hasn't really affected them at all. no i have friend has all. no i have a friend who has all. no i have a friend who has a company, so a discount a gin company, so i a discount anyway. in the anyway. so it hasn't in the fact, know, i agree with fact, you know, i agree with that. i don't think people that enjoy i'm i decent wine and what about thing i mean about this other thing i mean jeremy up quite jeremy hunt cropping up in quite a the papers he used a few of the papers he used a boost for pension funds. so what do make of this one? well, do you make of this one? well, what is so he's going to, as you say can't resist is no anywhere and threshold might be and the new threshold might be of maybe over 1.5 million in order to tackle rising trend of earlier the yes and that has been happening more and more since the pandemic apparently people even in their fifties have sort of been deciding to take early retirement. now i think we've just got used to not working . yeah you know i think working. yeah you know i think that cities lot of people i hated listening to people say well i can't do anything that's like well i can't i can do nothing fairly well so please
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don't that talk. most don't print that talk. so most people enjoy but hunt's people enjoy that, but hunt's doing sorts of things doing all sorts of things that obviously, he's he's obviously, you know, he's he's the there was this the other day there was this story about the childcare. you know, he's to woo with know, he's trying to woo with the yes subsidising and the idea of yes subsidising and that you know, that kind of thing, you know, i mean, all of these these changes hunt why really hunt is making, why really matter? he won't be in next time. no. you it's all time. no. you think it's all just paying lip service to people? what he why people? i don't know what he why he's i just trying he's bothering i just trying at this point were the tories this point if i were the tories it just goes through guess on the next election because this one of it's to one sort of gone it's going to go to front cover of the go to the front cover of the express. now of gary lineker was a the headlines the a dominating the headlines the other away. other day he hasn't gone away. it's on the express. it it's here on the express. it seems be of our of seems to be the story of our of our time so it has lineker now in of licence fee i mean i think i don't i don't think this is going to be the final nail in the licence for completely the licence fee for completely honest. kind of it's one honest. it's kind of it's one hot topic that are hot topic issue that people are going to forget about in about a week. can explain why week. but can you explain why with lineker for right with the lineker for right threatened the licence fee we've been having debates about the licence years , let's be
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licence fee for years, let's be honest. do you think honest. well, do you think a fact that if there talent who are you know on very high salaries who feel as if they can't express themselves, they're move they're all going to move to other places better wages other places for better wages and there'll be even less and then there'll be even less incentive to incentive for people to watch the stop it. do the bbc and people stop it. do you think it's a talent you think it's like a talent exodus is it just i mean, i'm exodus or is it just i mean, i'm not completely sure why the fee would be in here. the fee is in jeopardy because nobody watches would be in here. the fee is in jeo of 'dy because nobody watches would be in here. the fee is in jeo of my)ecause nobody watches would be in here. the fee is in jeo of my generation)ody watches would be in here. the fee is in jeo of my generation watch atches would be in here. the fee is in jeo of my generation watch the es all of my generation watch the bbc they don't. that is the problem. think bbc problem. what do you think bbc should this point, bruce should do at this point, bruce i think they should down and think they should pipe down and have to themselves have a think to themselves because think there's fair few because i think there's fair few problems going on there. yes, i think to think they really need to re—examine daytime schedule. re—examine the daytime schedule. it's yes, i'm it's quite depressing. yes, i'm and if people are paying 150 quid for the privilege being pnced quid for the privilege being priced home. yes, but i mean, priced at home. yes, but i mean, it is quite important. the bbc retains its impartiality . of retains its impartiality. of course the licence fee is not well, it's compulsory, so there are lots of people paying for things that they don't agree with. i think the tweet by with. and i think the tweet by lineker was, think the survey lineker was, i think the survey something like two thirds of the british completely
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british public completely disagree he said . you disagree with what he said. you know, it's not helping their situation, is it, at this point 7 situation, is it, at this point ? and he did say it was a ridiculous thing . yeah, yeah. ridiculous thing. yeah, yeah. the tory government with germany. sure. and got was germany. sure. and he got was quite of just casually quite sort of just casually bringing up, you sort of bringing up, you know, sort of germany the just to a germany and the just to make a point, but you know, should be allowed to himself. but allowed to express himself. but then under contract. then again, he's under contract. not say don't know. yeah. not to say don't know. yeah. it's only makes you here. it's only this makes you here. gary strikes as more i can gary strikes me as more i can come to show but come here to show here. but that's thing. apparently the that's the thing. apparently the other i'd looking to not other sides i'd looking to not necessarily poach him but often people say . well i'm what on the people say. well i'm what on the street is it's like double amount of money that you can lay off. but that's the point. it though, you do sign up for though, if you do sign up for the bbc you do also sign away your right to what you want on social that is the deal. social media. that is the deal. so my feeling is it's not a free speech. it's a you've made a decision contractually, which is of different would of a different thing. i would say anyway. 26 i'm going have a look front page of the look at the front page of the sun, a bruce glitter. sun, a bruce and gary glitter. i think actually going jump think i'm actually going jump in. you're going to jump in
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with. yeah, no reason why i should jump with glitter should jump in with gary glitter step i met him in step that time i met him in thailand i i shouldn't thailand when i was i shouldn't say so basically glitter say that so basically glitter back this a headline back in jail this is a headline so it's actually i would say probably probably the second most controversial british in the media at the moment. most controversial british in the media at the moment . at the the media at the moment. at the moment. i mean, i think he's several orders of magnitude worse, but , you know, well, the worse, but, you know, well, the sun describes him as the fiend and i do like these stories because they able to bring because they were able to bring their evocative and their vocabulary evocative and everybody. is he everybody. yeah. so why is he back in so the disgraced back in jail? so the disgraced p0p back in jail? so the disgraced pop has been found to be the dark web and online realm, apparently by. that is harder to monitor or track. he's as everybody . the dark web is why everybody. the dark web is why you buy acid no diddling just drugs. well, i'm sure there is actually some illicit link, but i've never been on the dark web. but i understand there are all sorts ghastly things that you sorts of ghastly things that you can well, i'm very can get. yeah, well, i'm very technologically so technologically literate, so i never know how do it. never really know how to do it. i i can barely use telegram, i can barely use tik tok i can
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barely use the software here which to you do up which i'm employed to you do up at dinner. it is hard but yeah, basically been talking and basically he's been talking and discussing that his discussing about things that his parole time and back in parole time and he's back in control. the one technically illegal were against control. the one technically ille parole were against control. the one technically ille parole the were against control. the one technically ille parole the things/ere against control. the one technically ille parole the things he'sagainst his parole the things he's talking. oh see. yeah. yeah. talking. oh i see. yeah. yeah. i mean it's difficult to have a hot take on this isn't it. if someone violates their parole, they to prison. yeah. they go back to prison. yeah. yeah you know, more say yeah you know, not much more say about obviously, about diddle. well obviously, but of goes without but that sort of goes without saying. yeah. anyway, those are the pages dealt with. but the front pages dealt with. but coming a break, coming up after a short break, the police ditching non—core the police are ditching non—core crime incidents. finally crime hate incidents. finally scotland the scotland are ditching the monarchy and jonathan will be doing his best to eliminate world poverty . so see you in 3 world poverty. so see you in 3 minutes .
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welcome back to . headline is welcome back to. headline is with me andrew doyle. your first look at tuesday's newspapers .
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look at tuesday's newspapers. joining me are jonathan kogan and bruce devlin . let's begin and bruce devlin. let's begin with tuesday's some welcome news here, jonathan . yes, the fine in here, jonathan. yes, the fine in the uk done something sensible and taken a step back from its orwellian trajectory so police to be banned from recording non crime hate incidents because someone is offended. actually earlier andrew told me my shirt was a crime. hate incidents. i said it offensive. yeah. yeah. well it doesn't even need to be reported now, but what you were going to report me for, for hate crimes? yeah, this. this is this. i this is me. this is who i am. the person i like. confused. it's a visual on textually . it's skating. oh, textually. it's skating. oh, it's auto. roy no, i'm familiar. i'm not saying. it's auto. roy no, i'm familiar. i'm not saying . right. so this i'm not saying. right. so this is bizarre story. the police been recording i think over a five year period they recorded over 120,000 non crimes . and of over 120,000 non crimes. and of course the trouble with that is the police are supposed be investigating crime. yes. as opposed non crimes wasting a opposed to non crimes wasting a lot with this and of lot of time with this and of course would it would course they would it would affect people's job because they
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it on a disclosure it shows up on a disclosure barring service. so if someone has police and said has phoned the police and said oh bruce said oh that bruce devlin said something offended something that really offended me a non crime me that might be a non crime hate incident recorded against your then apply for your name and then you apply for a you don't get it a job and you don't get it because of that. so this is a problem. it's like a permanent don't think that would be the only wouldn't only reason i wouldn't get whatever is. no they whatever job it is. no they wouldn't answer to it wouldn't say my answer to it lends itself to conventional employment. think haven't employment. i think i haven't employment. i think i haven't employment. conventional employment. conventional employlrent employment. conventional employi maybe was a bad you do i maybe that was a bad example. i just though, example. can i just ask though, are as to whether you are you aware as to whether you have on your record or not? have this on your record or not? that's a very good question. and have this on your record or not? thithe a very good question. and have this on your record or not? thithe a very ggroupsestion. and have this on your record or not? thithe a very ggroups havel. and so the various groups have looked into this now, civil liberties groups and the like show can so you you show that you can ask so you you have to contact the and have to contact the police and say have a non crime hate say do i have a non crime hate incident by my name? and now following intervention by following this intervention by the it will be the home secretary, it will be scrapped. they get rid scrapped. oh, they get rid of all them. so get rid of all of them. so they get rid of everything the looks everything from, the looks of things came about things and of these came about because college of policing because the college of policing decided they start decided that they should start recording absolute recording non crime, absolute waste of everyone's time. so but how can they just sort of
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introduce so i mean you've written about this kind of extensively in your books which on sale now all good read thank you. yeah i didn't ask you you. yeah i didn't even ask you to no, i mean, they do to do that. no, i mean, they do it because the college of policing is a quango and they they they sort of make their rules right. when rules up. right. and then when there were various court there were the various court cases, was a high court cases, there was a high court judgement. you judgement. harry miller, who you know took, took this know took, took, took this on and the home secretary said and then the home secretary said okay stop this okay you've got to stop this now, got to stop now, you've got to stop recording that two recording now. that was two years ago it's taken this years ago and it's taken this long and the high court said, yeah it's not lawful. what we're doing the and the doing to the police and the police on doing it police carried on doing it anyway. now finally it looks anyway. so now finally it looks like watching like it's over. we're watching the it is the watchmen and it is ridiculous one of the ridiculous because one of the they trivial as they include trivial cases as they include trivial cases as the bedfordshire ended the bedfordshire man who ended up with the police found for whistling theme tune to bob whistling the theme tune to bob the isn't. yes, because the builder isn't. yes, because that perceived hatred that was perceived racial hatred because understand. because i don't understand. well the is the the reason for that is the college of policing have said it's as non crime it's it counts as a non crime hate incident. if someone perceives it's offensive perceives that it's offensive whether meant to be whether it was meant to be offensive or not is utterly
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irrelevant it gets recorded every intention doesn't even every so intention doesn't even count. that's ridiculous. count. no that's ridiculous. so it things are it finally looks like things are changing. scotland has changing. but scotland has a long way to go. i mean, the scottish police record, they have of jokes on a have hundreds of jokes on a database by scottish citizens that that's that they found online. that's why . oh, leo kearse. why leo kearse. oh, leo kearse. yeah, yeah yeah they do. and they tell anyone. so they don't tell anyone. so again, have to put in again, you have to put in a freedom of information act to find out why isn't it legislate that if you are subject to one of these things or whatever, that you immediately get to it, it shouldn't be issued at all. of course. should be, but apparently not. maybe they don't have because have the manpower because the recording, incidents well, recording, the incidents well, they lot of time they it takes a lot of time to be to them. a lot of be fair to them. a lot of examples of effort for nothing anyway. what about the claims is making telegraph? well, making in the telegraph? well, i don't are surprised don't why people are surprised about this i do always think about this and i do always think it's watching it's interesting watching people report the snp because by virtue of them being discourteous party a referendum on independence is never off the table because people go but they are one single party and you know that is one of the driving forces .
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is one of the driving forces. what he is saying here is that scotland could ditch the monarchy within five of monarchy within five years of leaving united . now, it's leaving the united. now, it's very because went very interesting because went back to 2014, alex salmond say that the queen would remain the elected . i am, yes. i say he's elected. i am, yes. i say he's about because the snp's policy is to remain a monarchy. well it was with nicola as well . she was with nicola as well. she also agreed with that . but maybe also agreed with that. but maybe this is him trying to woo more. yes, voters are , you know, i yes, voters are, you know, i mean, i don't know . it's pretty mean, i don't know. it's pretty mixed there, isn't it? so the polling in scotland is suggestive of that 40% would like scotland to remain a monarchy and 40% wouldn't. and then the others sort of know where they also it's really right down the line if you want to win votes. is this necessarily the best way to do it? i'm in one way, i suppose if you if you think about it, at least being direct, he's you know showing people he's saying, you i'm not such as he's a citizen and he's a republican. he's a subject not a subject . he's a subject not a subject. yes. so i think a i think that
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kind of plain talking appeal to a lot of voters . what do you a lot of voters. what do you think about this, jonathan? do you think this is a good idea? i mean, obviously, humza yousaf is now really he's got his eye on the prize at this show and he's got to fend off as a name because she's 15 points ahead. she ahead. so what do you do you think this is something of a hail mary? oh, this is something of what he of this is absolutely what he believes. to it. believes. he wants to it. i don't i well, i mean, i always assume are telling the truth because gullible actually because i'm gullible actually politicians. here i politicians. but but here i don't think would don't know. i think it would kind funny. have like a kind of be funny. i have like a mini a play of kind of mini like a play war of kind of thing. again with the king and i have another scottish hamilton but it's been since james the that the monarchy has been unhed that the monarchy has been united there's really united it so there's really quite lot to unpick if we were quite a lot to unpick if we were going this well absolutely going to do this well absolutely people be the people want andy money to be the elected state scotland elected of state for scotland can be king. i don't can they not be king. i don't know. could do something know. they could do something like that. the third or something. yeah not sure. to something. yeah i'm not sure. to me, we're to on this me, we're going to move on this one the independent. one in the independent. jonathan, is about mp jonathan, this is about mp making things it and
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making things up. i know it and it's entire job it's not there entire job description maybe hot description maybe that's my hot take there we go the take politicians there we go the independent this in the independent yes this is in the independent. yep. so according to my real account or at three mps have made easily disputable claims. so look on take or can't says three months ago today andrew bridgen stood up in the chamber in the house for comments and spread anti—vax propaganda. he quoted a controversial doctor who called for a complete cessation of the administration covid many administration of the covid many vaccines. because of vaccines. everyone because of clear robust data of clear and robust data of significant ongoing benefit. significant and ongoing benefit. so you know he's he's stood up and he's made some pretty you could argue them to be very wild claims that was that was a while ago and fair to britain claims that was that was a while ago and fairto britain he ago and to be fair to britain he was making claim that some was making the claim that some people died as a result of people had died as a result of the vaccine, which is that's not that true , as i understand that is true, as i understand it. so i'm torn about this article, because then she goes on about his latest on to talk about his latest claim . and andrew bridgen has claim. and andrew bridgen has out and i think this was yesterday saying that i can confirm that during my visit to
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washington dc. last christmas new year, i was informed the us department of defence will are responsible for both the virus , responsible for both the virus, the vaccines, which is a extraordinary that all of the virus and the vaccine originated in some kind of plot from washing fish and you would expect some evidence attached to that. there is no evidence it shouldn't be that i heard like a mate told me this is a sitting mp, this is serious. i mean, it's ridiculous, but it shouldn't shouldn't we be i mean, the problem with this article is i think she's edging the idea we should censor people and should able to show they and should be able to show they think just think shouldn't we just criticise throw stuff criticise mps who throw stuff there without giving evidence for. i would say so for. yeah, i would say so because mean those pretty because i mean those are pretty outrageous of you outrageous claims and of you evidentiary support and why are you that because it's you saying that because it's essentially european? the essentially just european? the other for the other thing was for the avoidance doubt , 50 minutes avoidance of doubt, 50 minutes cities originally an open cities was originally an open planning concept that suggested services spread out services should be spread out across algorithms . the name across algorithms. the name comes the that everyone comes from the that everyone should be should live within 15
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minutes of amenities . and this minutes of amenities. and this is in reference to nick fletcher, who asked the commons for a debate on. yeah except for 15 minutes. i'm saying that would cost us our personal freedom, which i didn't really understand because i mean, if you've only, you know, 50 minutes to walk to the doctor, the skill that have to drop off your and then to the your children and then go to the shops, sounds pretty good shops, that sounds pretty good to so, i mean, leave though. to me. so, i mean, leave though. i want to i think this is interesting because it's interesting because it's interesting debate interesting to. have a debate about we do about when about what do we do about when npis problem with npis things up. the problem with the she's you know the article is she's you know she pulled up andrew bridgen on this tweet and she's this latest tweet and she's right do because it's right to do so because it's a preposterous but then preposterous tweet. but then she's up. miriam cates, who the point graphic point that there are graphic lessons, sexually explicit lessons, sexually explicit lessons schools lessons going on in schools including references to gender identity. and article by identity. and this article by marina kohn says that is disproved. that is provably not the case. she's wrong. it is. i've seen that. i've the materials. this is absolutely true is partisan in true. the article is partisan in its own way. yes. and he found no conspiracy theory. it can be true that throughout history plenty have proven to true
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plenty have proven to be true over time. but i do stand over time. yes, but i do stand by my view that virgin should if he's to claims that he's going to make claims that serious, back them up serious, he should back them up with anyway. with evidence anyway. very easy to up claim that there are to back up claim that there are sexually materials sexually explicit materials school that there school and the belief that there are multiple genders that is being schools. being taught some schools. anyway, let's inflation with this one and does male this one and choose does male bruce yeah i mean it's sitting here the iphones kill off 1990s favourite such as cds and alcopops what do they mean by that. just that they've they've made these things obsolete . this made these things obsolete. this has to do with the office national statistics and i think just been going through their and basically that were in favour in the 1990s are no longer in favour because moved on. yes which seems me is so much of a news story please . and much of a news story please. and the thing is i miss hooch. do still remember a really good mixer but it was like lemonade wasn't it. but use huge a mixer. oh yes. alcoholic drink as a mixer you'd imagine . yeah. okay. mixer you'd imagine. yeah. okay. oh well quickly go on to the
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next one. this is about eradicate global poverty from tuesday. god you and jonathan, i believe you've come up with your own plan to resolve issue. you've seen green, right? oh i don't know what that is. oh, it's when they feed the people to the other people. no i do. i don't have terrible ism. then cannibalism is going to go full. jonathan swift, i won't know what that means. no no, i don't want to read a book. god. right. so good extreme poverty be so good extreme poverty could be eradicate globally by 2050. that is good news . by eradicate globally by 2050. that is good news. by asking eradicate globally by 2050. that is good news . by asking news, i is good news. by asking news, i mean, it's forecast in the report but yes, you know we'll see what happens . how do they see what happens. how do they think this will achieved ? so see what happens. how do they tithink1is will achieved ? so see what happens. how do they tithink a; will achieved ? so see what happens. how do they tithink a lot ll achieved ? so see what happens. how do they tithink a lot of achieved ? so see what happens. how do they tithink a lot of it achieved ? so see what happens. how do they tithink a lot of it is:hieved ? so see what happens. how do they tithink a lot of it is to eved ? so see what happens. how do they tithink a lot of it is to dod ? so i think a lot of it is to do with just developing economic growth , essentially just the growth, essentially just the trajectory we've all been on. it looks as if i mean , are lifted looks as if i mean, are lifted out of it. something like 100,000 people are out of poverty every and yes, i that's a number i've heard. don't quote me on it. so i think it is just the trajectory developing nafions the trajectory developing nations increased economic growth and technological you know a lot of like even to
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compare our own lives 200 years ago the amount of time you have to spend working light your home. yes several orders magnitude less. it's funny isn't it because we constantly hear about world is getting worse about the world is getting worse and all of the and that's awful. but all of the studies to show that studies seem to show that actually poverty is getting better pinker better and better. steven pinker did thing he just did a whole thing on it. he just didn't think write a book didn't think of write a book about i believe. yes so. about this, i believe. yes so. actually, things globally speaking, terms are speaking, terms of poverty are getting better, but they're still lots of poor. got still lots of poor. we've got a lot we used to. lot more nucleus we used to. it's great. it's fantastic. it's something you've wanted for a long. yeah, that's long. yeah, well, that's the thing to money, thing that does seem to money, but kind of questionable, but it's kind of questionable, which is a priority project to be really be solved. yes you know really it's about the registry of that money. yes. that should be the case. left wing case. that's my little left wing point the night. anyway point of the night. anyway that's the bag. but that's part two in the bag. but coming up the pope rethinking coming up the pope is rethinking adults , rethinking their dream adults, rethinking their dream jobs is jobs and prince andrew is rethinking well, probably everything. so in a few minutes
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welcome back to headliners your first look at tuesday, his most compelling news stories. we're going to go to tuesday's express now is the pope getting a bit randy bruce ? well, i think randy bruce? well, i think there's i am there's maybe something the water or indeed the wine. so pope francis has hit out a study hinted at the end of the 1000 year old celibacy rule after calling on. so he's what he's saying priests might be able to get married and have sexual . that's quite have sexual. that's quite a turnaround . i mean, as far as turnaround. i mean, as far as i'm concerned, priests just do that. well, that's own stuff. yeah, because what we're discussing nothing intimate but all i would say is 1000 years. that's long. while i can't seem temporary to me. so it seems as though trying to change it. maybe he is now. there's always a problem, isn't there, jonathan. whenever the catholic
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church to change of church tries to change one of their rules because of papal infallibility, idea that infallibility, the idea that the p0pe infallibility, the idea that the pope make mistake . and pope cannot make a mistake. and so all these popes that have been going on about the importance of celibacy all importance of celibacy for all these that to say these years believe that to say they're and they're all wrong. yeah. and they're all wrong. yeah. and they say they're they they can't say they're wrong. yes either they're a conduh wrong. yes either they're a conduit for the word of god. and they know, they are by they you know, they are by biblical they've biblical standards or they've got you say. so got it wrong, like you say. so what does not change his mind about that i mean unless about this is that i mean unless he's getting liberal which he's getting more liberal which which possible but how much of being year priest and being an 80 year old priest and you've practising celibacy you've been practising celibacy oil we're oil life only find out we're changing be livid changing that now you be livid you absolutely furious. oh, you be absolutely furious. oh, he'd fantastic he'd have a fantastic final. yeah, just get out. i'm if you weren't this is thing. weren't able. this is thing. i mean, you said it to i mean, you know we until our sponsors are all now i don't know about one i don't think they're going to change rules suddenly it would be too radical. do you think this is in an effort to win back people to come back to. no because i know because i think the of the catholic the appeal of the catholic church traditionalism. i church is its traditionalism. i think that's people want
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think that's what people want from think want from it. don't think they want all radical. do all these sort of radical. do you they could get they you think they could get they could become more traditional and down some of the and double down on some of the so for anybody even if so no for sex anybody even if you're a priest i think you're not a priest i think that's actually very good that's actually a very good idea. like my idea. yeah sounds like my teenage one of the hate teenage is one of the non hate crimes it could be could well be right but let's move on to this next and this is from next story and this one is from the can you relate to the metro. can you relate to this john? probably can. this one, john? i probably can. it almost half of it is, yeah. almost half of working people don't. the dream job exists while let me just say that weeks no jobs will that in a few weeks no jobs will exist thanks all done. exist thanks to their all done. they're done. everyone's they're all done. everyone's going on ubi sitting going to be on ubi and sitting at home and i really hope you're wrong. i know if i ever been wrong. i know if i ever been wrong but then friend of mine just by robot in just got served by robot in a restaurant oh restaurant and you think, oh started. that in northern. started. that was in northern. was it your sushi. they had little guys. well it was the way it was not precedent it seemed was not a precedent for that of thing. yeah, for that kind of thing. yeah, that just conveyor belt, that was just a conveyor belt, you mean, it's a step you know? i mean, it's a step forward is okay, let's forward that what is okay, let's get back to this article. no one thinks the dream job exists, but most to see the job as a
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necessary you know to earn the money that you need to live your life. sure and that's not nothing. not that, you know, that can be in a very important part of people's life. and they can get some fulfilment for providing and be providing for a family and be able live a quality of that able to live a quality of that they live. but yes, i'm they want to live. but yes, i'm big believer in sort of big believer in just sort of turning and assuming get turning off and assuming get hired like on for some hired like i'm on tv for some reason. i don't know why. i do not know why. no here i am. you have your dream job. yeah. jonathan bruce a you jonathan exactly. bruce a you know, person. person, yeah, know, a person. person, yeah, but comedian. is that but a stand—up comedian. is that your job? no i still don't your dream job? no i still don't know dream know what my dream job is? i don't know. i'm just you think it's out there? like you think it's out there? like you think it exists ? not necessarily, no it exists? not necessarily, no no. then you all. we could no. well, then you all. we could all become priests. maybe that's the oh, and then we the dream job. oh, and then we could reuse energy, find could reuse sexual energy, find other nefarious purposes. yeah, we absolutely could. let's on before that gets a bit too graphic what about this from tuesday's telegraph why should the workplace allow jonathan you were late this evening. okay i did notice that. i promise this
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is true. i was reading this article. he has asked ridiculous. just being so soft on people that i remembered. i actually got off the train twice in stops today. twice would in one stops today. twice would go twice. twice. anyway sorry. are you dyslexic? i assume so. i'm something you're okay? something because they're saying here that dyslexic people should be given leniency. you when it comes to arriving late , i think comes to arriving late, i think thatis comes to arriving late, i think that is brexit. but what i was going to say and to what extent does this idea i've never heard and i used to teach dyslexic kids i've never heard of a correlation between dyslexia and punctuality or thereof. in punctuality or lack thereof. in this to do with this case, it's to do with sorry, dyslexic numerically sorry, i'm dyslexic numerically and i that is calculus. but how the numbers they call that now it's the invention of numbers and i know i'm not talking about that make you but no it doesn't it did make this person light so i'm doing something him because was looking at digital clocks or watches i mean these numbers not funny there's some other kind of
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clock that could have. well this is the thing. but think before i find telling manual clocks very difficult as well. the time when they're so do you think well i'm bruce that case you think bruce in that case you think because of this it makes sense that the ruled in favour of the dyslexic person. i'm yeah i can't see why think he's arty it's can't see why think he's arty wsfime can't see why think he's arty it's time it sounds like someone's making an excuse a little bit you know be yeah but that's not i to explore the and so here this is true the smithsonian was smithsonian museum in america was talking about how punctual it was a sign of white privilege think it could have been and actually you know it's to expect people to be could have been and actually you kn
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this is a fancy story and all of my scientific comes from emmanuelle in space. so not sure if i fully comprehend it's a manual in space it's a film, it's an erotic series set in space. have you seen it? i thought you meant david emmanuel, who designed princess his wedding dress. no, no oh. oh, speaking at cross—purposes, norman, you are because thing is in about five parts. he always in about five parts. he always in these bond meets among you and all that kind of stuff . and all that kind of stuff. okay, i was feeling a fool at times show my age and i saw that i was about to off on a tangent and sean bruce, we've got to get on with the story. i'm sorry. jonathan what? the story. the story a scientist discovers superconducting that superconducting material that could revolution could bring total revolution in energy and electronics. so name how so? not to raise expectations. scientists have discovered a new material that could be set to change the entire world. so it's a material that works both at a temperature and a pressure low enough to actually in practical actually use in practical situations. it does situations. what it does is essentially understand essentially can if i understand
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it, electricity without it, transmit electricity without any resistance. so normally in all when you're all circuits, when you're using electricity , have resistance, electricity, have resistance, which believe i could be which i believe i could be wrong. stephen alan is going to be very fierce with me it's essentially a waste energy. essentially a waste of energy. this can actually this material you can actually use 100% of the energy part of the circuit. so it says the electric circuit. so it says he can be more efficient, saves millions of megawatt hours currently resistance. currently lost to resistance. yeah you imagine that's yeah yeah. if you imagine that's just wasted energy. yes our efficiency goes up. it also allows i think , technology that allows i think, technology that we wouldn't otherwise be able to use because that to power dependent so in a cost of living crisis this kind of energy saving you know the innovation that innovation voice the new material that they we know this it's been nicknamed red matter but i think it is essentially just some scientific thing i mean do do does that's a very technical term for it is yes red matter sounds scary to me this from star trek i think i think oh is it is it not reversed myself lithium mixed with
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hydrogen oh good well they're on a small part of nitrogen someone's answer is someone's reading the answer is well . it's like one of well exactly. it's like one of those drinks i used. it's a those drinks i used. it's got a single on it does. single mark on it. it does. okay, going to move to okay, we're going to move to this this in the this one. what about this in the telegraph, this is telegraph, bruce? this is a prince andrew. he's bewildered. he's the villager because he's yet receive inherited yet to receive his inherited from his mother. the money apparently charles and apparently gone to charles and the it's going from monarch to monarch. and i that to kind monarch. and i that was to kind of deal with inheritance tax . of deal with inheritance tax. oh, i see. but is that not the norm for the monarchy, that they just pass over to the next monarch and say, you kind of deal with this? well yeah, i've no idea. but charles basically said because it was one of andre's bills, this is quite outdated. yeah, it comes after the 74 year old king apparently refused for prince refused to pay for prince andrew's indian healer guru who charges £33,000 a year. the was appointed to treat the prince with messages and i saw the messages messages so he just like messages and i just think that just sounds like an important business. do you think
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keep this facilitated though that you know as opposed to maybe he shouldn't have given away million pounds so readily then and he might have had some money in which live on but but surely it's fair enough that, you know, his mother's died. yeah, he would expect some and she wasn't short of a bulb. no so i think he should expect something. come. royals something. how come. the royals don't to pay tax. that's don't have to pay tax. that's fine. they because they're fine. they just because they're the royals because they're the royals is because they're the royals is because they're the so you know, the royals. yeah. so you know, that's different that's a different issue, jonathan. there's jonathan. yeah but there's also a family evicted wherever a family being evicted wherever he from one to my unborn he lives from one to my unborn to like to, to up to me is not in a one bedroom flat in deptford, but it's a lovely actually it's all right. yeah, yeah. actually it's all right. yeah, yeah . to be found much money. yeah. to be found much money. okay. well that is it for this section but coming up in the final part, we've apocalyptic plans , bountiful seeds . calm plans, bountiful seeds. calm down, bruce. and how eating squirrels might save humanity. see you in a second .
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welcome back to headliners, your first look at tuesday's newspapers with me, andrew doyle. let's go to the daily star now. and in a few weeks you will be saying armageddon. text from the government. jonathan knight sounds like a like a frightened italian. like armageddon. armageddon that takes the form of the government and to fully apologise and we'd like to fully apologise to all italians for that. no hate crime watching that . and of hate crime watching that. and of tv's. right. so yeah. so was this is a this is kind of terrifying and read and read books and i what know i meant what i said so uk to test terrifying armageddon alarm as brits warned alert to come within weeks so the government is actually going to send an alarm your phone it's going alarm down your phone it's going to scream at you and the end of the is coming. yeah well the world is coming. yeah well not they're going to not only that they're going to test not to test it. you're not going to know when coming, why you know when it's coming, why you might them out. but why do they have phones, do
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have access to our phones, do this kind of thing? yeah. what's. yeah yeah. if you've what's. yeah oh yeah. if you've got tock then ccp have got tick tock then the ccp have access your phone. everyone's access to your phone. everyone's got this particular got access to this particular access you'll find andrea. everyone of everyone seen everything any of us yes but us have ever googled? yes but luckily i have nothing to hide. so not where you so mean. this is not where you feel it does. then i was feel it does. but then i was a victim of a scam before christmas and it was a tax thing. i'd say, oh, two lost thing. i'd say, oh, you two lost money, blah blah blah blah blah. yeah. a wee bit yeah. so i was a wee bit vulnerable, more of later and i phoned and the was really, really he was horrible and was sweating and all kind of sweating and all that kind of stuff. he had a copy of stuff. but he had a full copy of my report. i'm not trying my credit report. i'm not trying to say that was owed money on. to say that i was owed money on. iended to say that i was owed money on. i ended up being like a boiler. i ended up being like a boiler. i on finance few years i take on finance a few years ago, that's probably just ago, but that's probably just taking your daughter in detail. but i do think but the thing is, i do think that are listening to that people are listening in to phone calls, but the reason that they criminalise they can't criminalise using that evidence because you that as evidence is because you can you've can countersue, because you've essentially your essentially hacked or your privacy violated. you know, i think a big deal, but think this is a big deal, but know the government shouldn't willy nilly wear a she said she says call she says distress call and she clearly here's the clearly but also here's the other if the of the
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other thing if the end of the world imminent. other thing if the end of the world imminent . yeah i mean, world is imminent. yeah i mean, they're talking like what they're talking about like what if nuclear bomb about if there's a nuclear bomb about to off in uk? i don't to go off in the uk? i don't want to know. just see an army want to know. i just see an army to what if it's not me and to be what if it's not me and got 20 minutes to get in the car and drive away. i mean i dunno. i the last thing the i think the last thing the government want to is government want to do is orchestrate panic in the orchestrate a panic in the roads. know, i think in the roads. you know, i think in the event of a tsunami you accept that some people going to that some people are going to die just don't let them die and you just don't let them know give them a heads know about it, give them a heads up i'd much happier up because i'd be much happier for who could just for of people who could just saunter if they, like, saunter off if they, like, walked road, you walked metres down the road, you know, in extreme circumstances. jonathan, you have to make some. i phone on silent i have my phone on silent anyway. going to anyway. so not going to lie about it. that's the thing. about it. but that's the thing. the of people do. the vast majority of people do. for. so is it good to know? i think you know, i think over the screams that you according to this article screams this article it just screams nuclear attack. is alan partridge we're under partridge going oh, we're under attack to it's attack it's going to be it's going to quite shocking, going to be quite shocking, i think. i don't like the sound of this all. anyway, we're this at all. anyway, we're moving to this story. the moving on now to this story. the next one about repository next one about a repository
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that's lots of different seeds. bruce doomsday bruce moore, doomsday scenario with ark vault now has with noah's ark vault now has 2.4 billion in case 2.4 billion seed in case apocalypse. right? right. so this the express and this this is in the express and this is conservation . yes. is a seed conservation. yes. they've all these different is a seed conservation. yes. they'ispecies. l these different is a seed conservation. yes. they'ispecies. yeah.e different is a seed conservation. yes. they'ispecies. yeah. there's�*nt plant species. yeah. there's over 40,000 for the millennium seed banks. yes. and it's like a noah's ark. so in other words, if the if armageddon happens, we need to make sure they can regrow the. but do you think is the fact that people that are organising this know something is going to happen and it's to conspirators or something always happens. might be every happens. it might be every 20,000 you we 20,000 years, but, you know, we all that an asteroid came all know that an asteroid came in younger dryas impact in the younger dryas impact 12,000 years ago wiped out civilisation, destroyed atlantis. had to atlantis. and then we had to rebuild. have some rebuild. and we have some of that leftover. i'm like 50% joking. but say kind of joking. but i will say kind of the same. i really believe that it's okay. i fully believe it's going okay. i fully believe the let's go crime hacking world. they might world. but i mean, they might know, but isn't this good to kind we have kind make sure that we have you're saying it's a bad you're not saying it's a bad thing, but i. i personally would like know. i know you don't like to know. i know you don't want to you think that want to know. you think that they already know our time
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they already know that our time is why they're is and that's why they're collecting yeah, this is collecting seeds. yeah, this is the or maybe is the thing or maybe rosita is going go out of production. the thing or maybe rosita is going is go out of production. the thing or maybe rosita is going is some|t of production. the thing or maybe rosita is going is some secret oduction. the thing or maybe rosita is going is some secret government there is some secret government vauu there is some secret government vault every species vault with two of every species of animal. we know we're in trouble. well, some i think that's. that will be the next breaking news, won't it? yeah i don't it. i think what we don't like it. i think what we should if there is a big should do is if there is a big meteor that's going to wipe us out, just accept. out, i think we just accept. okay, had our chance. i said okay, we had our chance. i said not meant to be one. is it 20, 50? is there there's one in 23 or 27. you while poverty has been eradicated, great i like or 27. you while poverty has been theiicated, great i like or 27. you while poverty has been the picture great i like or 27. you while poverty has been the picture moments.e sadly the picture moments. right. to on right. we're going to move on there. that's eradicate there. that's what eradicate this the times and this is tuesday's the times and i'm not i want to eat food i'm not sure i want to eat food in the future. so jonathan this one is yeah this is this is interesting eating squirrel is good the planet says expert. now this interesting this is this is interesting because heard something because i've heard something similar me i similar my girlfriend told me i should more but there should eat more beaver but there aren't in the uk so. don't aren't any in the uk so. i don't really know she was talking really know what she was talking about. so week though about. so, so last week though i look for hopefully russian state media. so british people were having because having to eat squirrels because there else in the there was little else in the shops. they basically on
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shops. so they basically went on the now are not the beaver. right now are not squirrels a type vermin, but squirrels a type of vermin, but you then people do eat you know, but then people do eat pigeons pigeons. vermin, pigeons and pigeons. vermin, isn't some pigeon isn't it? oh yeah. some pigeon isn't it? oh yeah. some pigeon is a delicacy, it is quite a delicacy, isn't it posh, musty, aristocratic relative. it's a lobster. relative. so it's a lobster. used what they'd give poor used to be what they'd give poor people ships. it's become people on ships. now it's become like luxury thing of it's all like a luxury thing of it's all it's culturally relative food. so. it squirrel such a so. so why is it squirrel such a boon according to these experts what's so great the question it's quite well it's a taste apparently in between and rabbit which is you know some really yeah according to the chef tim adams and you know it's me it's protein that's lean i wouldn't eat a squirrel i think partly because i admire them so much that cute. yeah they're industrious you know, the way that they bounce upon the trees with the acorns , you know, the with the acorns, you know, the acrobatic, athletic there's a lot to admire about a squirrel absolutely. and i tried my every that they you know that's unusual they say oh always like chicken they do always say that that's a reference point i suppose that's yeah what does
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chinchilla like except beans if i would. that's very expensive. i would. that's very expensive. i would. that's very expensive. i would you know, i'm a vegetarian , i would probably eat vegetarian, i would probably eat a chinchilla . well, i think just a chinchilla. well, i think just to have the anecdote. well, make that happen. would you eat a small. no, no , no. draw the line small. no, no, no. draw the line at that. this from the telegraph now is about bears rejecting scientology something i'm read it racism . yes tom has been told it racism. yes tom has been told that he cannot land his helicopters on earth on on take to take the polar bears untouched habitat. so this is review the new mission impossible. yes but what he's angry about is that the same place i'm going to try and planes that i want to say svalbard it's 12 odd small part. yeah okay but this region no the place is keeping all land because absorbent material right. yet the region been used in the 2002 bond film die another day. yes so i think he's a bit hacked off. but i think this is probably to do with this
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is a climate thing if you see what i mean and to do with the hibernating and, all that kind of stuff. they want to film around these polar bears and this mission impossible dead this is mission impossible dead reckoning part two. yes well, the danes and the bears will be danes and bears. this not good bears. yeah. so this is not good for bears. no, exactly. for the bears. no, exactly. the tom to thinking that he tom has to stop thinking that he has a god given right just to go anyway off building anyway to swing off a building and his uncle. but that's what i mean. he says he all his mean. he says he does all his own stunts. he wants to be, you know, a polar stripped know, fighting a polar stripped to in arctic. and to the waist in the arctic. and i to the waist in the arctic. and l pay to the waist in the arctic. and i pay to see that would i would pay to see that would you yeah. yeah. you wouldn't. yeah. oh, yeah. risky business. you know who you want he the want to visit? you think he the bears just suck it up? bears should just suck it up? i think so. what if they want to be in the film you know, this is taking jobs away from polar bears be actors bears who want to be actors and extras. how many mission impossible films that being impossible films are that being impossible films are that being i about 90. i mean, surely 90. about 90. yeah i we we're yeah i think we surely we're done army. i don't know. done by now army. i don't know. he's getting younger. younger looking. yes. yeah, i it's looking. yes. yeah, i think it's very human very creepy. it's not the human growth hormone. it might be that or with satan. i like to or deal with satan. i like to think. oh, yeah. but that's think. oh, wow yeah. but that's
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the of me. the sort of catholic of me. anyway, going to finish on anyway, i'm going to finish on a feel story from tuesday's daily star, jones star, jonathan, indiana jones fan. i am the first three. the first number was first three number four was a bit first three number four was a bh and first three number four was a bit and the fourth time bit wacky and the fourth time with the aliens and the first things now i probably actually quite get quite like that because i get where they're from, but where they're coming from, but the i thought it's the time i thought it's ridiculous and this is not harrison who indiana harrison who plays indiana jones, has had an jones, of course, has had an emotional with he with emotional reunion with he with the key hi can believe pronounce the key hi can believe pronounce the name a actor who has the name he's a actor who has just his oscar. he was just won his first oscar. he was and then we can them then and then we can see them then and then we can see them then and now q look he's the boy from of doom and he also in the of doom and he was also in the goonies . he was so recently he goonies. he was so recently he was everything all at once, was in everything all at once, which is smash it, the oscars. i've seen it. i've heard i've not seen it. i've heard wonderful except from our wonderful all except from our producer, martin said. it's not so good. jamie lee curtis so good. well, jamie lee curtis the last for that the oscar last night for that film she was robbed for film but i she was robbed for halloween two okay and i could wind to shake but she's wind up to shake oh but she's pronouncing yeah yeah pronouncing fisher yeah yeah yeah think she was so you yeah yeah i think she was so you know harrison ford is this emotional? i mean very emotional? i mean i was very it's a nice feel stories, it's a nice feel good stories, lots for last year lots of fun for the last year oscars right last year was a bit
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more controversial. yes, that's true chris rock true with the chris rock slapping although slapping event. yeah. although did of he did pretty well out of that. he is talking a special i mean, is talking in a special i mean, not dump on another not a not to dump on another comment but it wasn't and i like strong he's one of the greats but do you think this is quite you the oscars you you watch the oscars bruce you a fan. i'm not really no. i mind. i didn't understand why they didn't red carpet this didn't have the red carpet this yeah didn't have the red carpet this year. a champagne year. they went for a champagne coloured i know coloured carpet. i don't know the of well well the relevance of that. well well i'm sure what they're trying to say there. no, neither neither do just a lot of back do i. it it's just a lot of back slapping isn't to be honest. slapping isn't it. to be honest. a boring. it's nice to a bit boring. but it's nice to see ford, you know, see harrison ford, you know, laughing last year, but laughing was last year, but yeah, that was fun. sloppy punch. that is all punch. well, look, that is all we've time for. look, we've got time for. but look, let's have another quick look at tuesday's pages before tuesday's front pages before we depart, daily mail depart, we've got the daily mail who leading a slap the who are leading a slap in the face for licence payers. face for bbc licence payers. this the gary lineker. of this is the gary lineker. of course. telegraph boost course. the telegraph has boost pensions ready to raise pensions as hunt ready to raise cap guardian bosses cap the guardian has bbc bosses face pressure after u—turn face a pressure after u—turn over lineker the times pm strikes submarine deal to face new threat and the daily star
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great bbc balls up one zero to the crisps salesmen we can't rid of lineker at the moment. it seems that is all we've got time for. thank you. to my wonderful guests, jonathan cogan and bruce devlin . and tomorrow, simon devlin. and tomorrow, simon evans be here joined by roger monkhouse , scott kapoor and if monkhouse, scott kapoor and if you're watching the 5 am. repeat right now, just stay tuned because the breakfast show is going to be on just after the break the rest of you, break for the rest of you, i will see you soon on headliners 11:00 every night.
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by evening. i'm jacob rees—mogg, state of the nation. tonight storm gareth as the meteorology office have officially named it hit the bbc over the weekend . hit the bbc over the weekend. all it suggested to me is it's time to privatise the public broadcaster altogether . we'll be
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broadcaster altogether. we'll be debating that shortly . unlucky debating that shortly. unlucky strikes continue as junior doctors begin their three consecutive days of collective inaction. we have our favourite socialist had to go to bat on a sticky and we lost our marbles. the elgin marbles specifically . the elgin marbles specifically. well, the prime minister says no , but the former chancellor, george osborne , now chairman of george osborne, now chairman of the british museum, who actually owns them on our behalf, thinks they should returned the they should be returned to the parthenon athens . vox populi. parthenon in athens. vox populi. vox we ask the people if vox day. we ask the people if the elgin marbles should be. and here's a taste of what they had to say . no no . here's a taste of what they had to say. no no . bold words from to say. no no. bold words from the gentleman there. state the nafion the gentleman there. state the nation starts now . nation starts now. we're also hearing from our illustrious panel, the acclaimed and celebrated historian dr. david starkey, and the equally
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acclaimed socialist stephen pound. acclaimed socialist stephen pound . as ever, i want to hear pound. as ever, i want to hear from you. get in touch by emailing mail, log at gbnews.uk. but before all of that, as always , it's been a busy day. always, it's been a busy day. and to keep us up to date is polly middlehurst . jacob, thank polly middlehurst. jacob, thank you and good evening to you. the top story on gb news tonight, the prime says it's the right decision for the government to pledge more money into bolstering the uk's defences. number ten announced today defence spending will rise by almost £5 billion over two years. that comes mr. sunak met his australian anthony albanese in san diego. ahead of unveiling a major new orca defence pact. as it's known between the uk, the united states australia plans be announced in conjunction with president joe biden. include supplying nuclear powered submarines to australia. ahead of that meeting , mr. sunak

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